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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  April 6, 2013 3:00am-7:00am PDT

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>> good morning, everyone. it's saturday april 6th. i'm alisyn camerota. on the brink this morning, north korea warning foreign embassies to get out of the capital of pyongyang saying it cannot guarantee its safety. this as new video surfaces of korean leader kim jong un firing a gun. how should the u.s. react to all of this. >> welcome to 1979. why the latest he jobs report set this country back over 30 years. details ahead. >> kenny loggans was popular in 1979. and the cost of being beautiful. it won't just hit your pocketbook. it will shorten your life span. how long it takes women to gram up in the morning will shock you, or not.
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alisyn. >> alisyn: won't shock me. >> clayton: "fox & friends" begins right now. >> alisyn: good morning, everybody. thanks so much for joining us bright and early. it's great to have tucker carlson back in the saddle. >> clayton: welcome back. >> tucker: welcome back. >> clayton: you are generally glad to be here. >> tucker: went out fishing. >> clayton: you caught fish. >> >> tucker: yes, i did. >> clayton: snkq new jersey. >> tucker: i will explain later. >> clayton: how long does it take to you get ready this morning? how many days of your life will be reduced as a result of getting ready? >> tucker: it's worth. did k. we address that fact?
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>> alisyn: that's debatable. >> clayton: you wouldn't want women walking around looking like me. >> alisyn: tell us what your most hated beauty ritual is. women have weighed in across the country. wait until you hear what we all hate doing? >> clayton: plucking? [ laughter ] >> tucker: i'm not weighing in on that. >> alisyn: meanwhile, let's get to your headlines and tell you what's happening at this hour. fbi interviews david petraeus at his home in arlington, virginia as part of the ongoing investigation into his marital affair. the fair with paula broadwell was revealed. the feds are trying to determine if broadwell received classified information. new details unfolding in the murder of a decorated jackson, mississippi police detective. we now know that eric smith was shot four times by a suspect he was interrogating inside police headquarters with his own gun. the suspect was able to take the gun from smith
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during questioning, shooting him in the arm and chest. he then turned gun on himself. we have amazing video of crews rescuing a stranded hiker in arizona. the 50-year-old canadian doctor apparently got lost and trapped on 700-foot ledge. the couple in the area heard her crying for help led searchers to the area. they had to use a helicopter to lift her to safety. she was taken to want hospital to be checked out but is expected to be okay. >> vice president joe biden will not be colleagues giving back to $231,000 salary because of the sequester for now this is. the vp will reportedly considering donating a portion to charity or returning part of the treasury if members of his staff are furloughed. president obama and several other high ranking administration officials have already announced that they are giving back some of their salary to the government. those are your headlines. >> clayton: gimmick. let's check in with -- that's my opinion.
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check in with rick reichmuth who is not a gimmick. felt like spring was here and suddenly felt like frost back on the car again. >> rick: i'm ready to get rid of the big puffy coat aren't you. >> clayton: i like the big puffy coat. >> rick: i'm burning mine this year it's done. don't get rid of it yet i can't guarantee that we're done with it. [boos] >> rick: exactly. across the north it's cold and stay that way. a lot is going to be happening weatherwise this week. a lot of snow for people and also talking about a the lo of severe weather. today we do have snow this morning across parts of right now up of michigan and in towards wisconsin and maine michigan. we're also scattered rain showers. kind of soaking in good across parts of the plains. really big storm here that's going to have big impacts for almost everyone through the much of the for the day today. cool. see that stretch of colder weather across the northern
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tier. everything across the plains is living extremely warm and exextremely nice. tomorrow talk about temps pushing 90's across parts of north texas. cold air dives down behind it that's when we will see major weather changes behind for us. pocket moves in sunday into monday. it warms in across parts of the east and in towards the central plains. this is going to set off a three day period where we are going to be looking at severe weather. monday we're talking about western kansas and oklahoma. tuesday, i think will be the biggest day and there will be a stretch somewhere from around missouri into arkansas and parts of oklahoma and texas where we could be talking about significant tornadoes. and then wednesday it moves a little bit farther off towards the east. about a three-day event here guys where we could be looking at the first significant tornadoes we have seen so far this spring. that could spell a lot of trouble with some people. with that we are talking about a foot and a half of snow across parts of nebraska. lots to talk about coming up. >> alisyn: maybe you are a
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gimmick. [ laughter ] >> tucker: april. stop making stuff up, rick. >> clayton: thanks, rick. let's talk about what's going on with president obama's budget because we haven't yet seen president obama's budget. we have a house budget. we have a senate budget and everyone is waiting for the obama administration. now we are getting some leaks. they float these out there, the press, presumably to see what the house and what is going to stick and what's going to sink. president angering some around the left not happy that he is going to gro after entitlement spending. this has angered some some of on the left fired back at howard dean's we will fight you tooth and nail. it seems like that's all we are getting left on the right now. these are not from the information we have so far this is radical reform. adjustment to the growth social security. probably not as deeply in trouble as medicare. they had intense support on
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the left so far. >> the president is apparently angrying people on both sides. release on wednesday. the left doesn't like that he is going to tackle some of these entitlement things and obviously the g.o.p. doesn't like that they have heard that he wants more more tax increases. they say they have already given him that here is his press secretary on what the president's thinking is. >> what i will say is that this is not the president's idealized budget. it is not what he would do if he were king or if only people who supported his proposals were in congress. it is what he believes is a fair and balanced approach to our deficit challenges. one that allows us to address, to protect seniors. help secure and the middle class and give ladders to those who want to get into the middle class. >> clayton: i do like the term fair and balanced with jay carney. where did he get that from?
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however it, doesn't make sense to your point about the amount of spending they have already asked for and the amount of spending that congress went along with in that lane duck session after the new year after we were going off the fiscal cliff. there has been a large amount of new spending. of the president wanting more spending to offset the cost of these cuts to medicare and medicaid. >> tucker: wait a second. if he were king. he her the -- if he had total authority, is carney saying he wouldn't cut entitlements at all? he would repeal the laws of math? we are in trouble economically because of entitlements. there is no real major driver of our debt. medicare is the major federal expenditure? he wouldn't cut it at all. >> alisyn: that sowbz like what he is say. >> tucker: crazy. >> alisyn: wish list of how they see the world and what jay carney is saying that's not the case this year. this is the president actually compromising. this is the president doing something out of his comfort zone. this is the president doing something that if he were king he wouldn't do. what he he is talking about
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the cost of living. >> tucker: that's crazy. >> alisyn: it does show ideologically how far apart the president is from where the republicans are. >> tucker: it's not even ideology. certain part it's math. a physics principle. if you spend more than you bring in you go bankrupt after a while, period. >> clayton: if you were listening to the folks yesterday this proves the sagging economy jobs numbers yesterday. we will put them up on the screen, is as a lack of spending. civilian labor force has plummeted 496,000 getting out oof the labor force last month. 63% down. now at 63%. that's the lowest level since 1979. only adding about 88 now, jobs last month. and again, the obama administration says this proved that we need to spend more to keep this economy chugging along right now in this fragile recovery.
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>> another thing they are claiming, tucker, this is some the results of sequester, look what's happening this is sequester. >> clayton: bologna. >> alisyn: how do you know? >> clayton: factually untrue. >> clayton: number of economists have come out yesterday saying none of these cuts -- there is no effect yet from any of the sequester cuts so far. so we won't see that for months if there are any identifiable problems with the sequester. certainly wouldn't be reflected in this month's jobs report. >> clayton: take a look at the relative -- this kind of answers your question. take look at the relative unemployment numbers. the national unemployment number. these are cooked numbers, let's be honest they don't measure really the health of the labor market. here is the official number 7.6 in america unemployment rate. >> alisyn: down even know the number was anemic. >> tucker: there is a reason we can explain. but the federal worker unemployment rate 3.6. they're is not unemployment crisis among government
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workers. >> clayton: even though we saw some cuts in the post office and so forth. still, they are looking pretty good. >> alisyn: here are the people most affected by unemployment right now. adult men the unemployment is 6.9%. adult women 7.0. whites, 6.7. hispanics unemployment rate is 9.2. blacks unemployment rate is 13.3. and then teenagers and i assume they mean people who are -- i actually don't know if this just means getting out of college or seasonal work of kids who are, you know, trying to make a living while going to school. 24.2%. >> clayton: late 1970s, a good time for music, right? had kenny log begins top of the charts. player top of the charts. little river band. reo speed wagon. rush limbaugh was feeling nostalgic for that time period not in a good way talking about economic crisis. listen to rush limbaugh seeing these similarities. >> we are living in a dying
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country. i don't know how else to categorize what's happening. 88,000 new jobs. the number of people in this country who are not working is shameful. 90 million americans are no longer in the workforce. 90 million. this is 1979 levels. the only difference is, that we don't have an election around the corner to fix it like we did in 1979. we had that election last november and we blew that. >> clayton: there was the election. speaking of charles payne yesterday brought up a great point on the barney show which is those people that got out of the workforce a lot of them were part time workers. it's more attractive to not
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work and sit on the couch than even to do part time work and receive government benefits. >> tucker: this is the measurable by the way. the unemployment numbers is a highly political number and it's not actually -- i mean, people who stopped working or looking for work are not included. in the labor force participation number is the one you look at 63% of the population who can work are working. the problem is this inflames the entitlement crisis. right? so the fewer people working, the more people who are dependent on government services. >> alisyn: we know the number much food stamps is at historic high. let us know what you think about all of this, please. depositions rising in north korea today. new video of leader kim jong un playing the tough guy. is that what is he doing? how should the u.s. respond? leading expert on the region is going to help us understand all of this next. >> clayton: like a mob boss. sequester cuts being blamed to close 100 airport towers. is the government now reconsidering? ♪
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>> brand new video released of north korean leader kim jong un firing a gun this as north korea doubles down on attacks to united states. u.s. is monitoring the situation. >> you have obviously seen the reports that north korea may be preparing to launch a missile and we are monitoring this situation closely. we would not be surprised to see them take such an action. we have seen them launch missiles in the past and the united nations security council has rerepeatedly condemned them. >> clayton: should would he be relying on china to help diffuse the situation. we are joined by gordon
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chang. north korea takes on the world. gordon, nice to see you this morning. >> thank you. >> clayton: let's start in the beginning with north korea. should would he be taking these threats seriously or just show for camera with kim jong un with a gun out there playing around. >> they pretend this is bluster. it comes at a particularly bad time because you have got new leaders in the region. they can't back down. you know, in north korea kim jong un hasn't consolidated his position in the regime. he is purge officials loyal to his dad trying to replace them those loyal to him no time since 1949 has a north korean leader has a weak base like he does today. accepting blow after blow from the north koreas and not responding. they are on hair trigger alert. this is not a good story. >> tucker: how did the united states wind up relying on china does not have our best interest at heart diffuse the situation to make the world safe? how did that happen?
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>> everyone wants to integrate china into the international system and the bush administration for instance thought that would be a good idea to put beijing front and center of the six party talks which are now dead because the idea was that china would step up. but unfortunately what china has dison it used its position of the center of the six party talks to help north koreans. that's why i think we are partly in it. over the course of decades, our policy towards north korea in stopping their nuclear weapons has been an utter failure. and so if we want better results, we need better tactics. those better tactics start with better policies on china. >> clayton: better policies on china to elaborate on tucker's question. stop and tamp down the tensions coming out of north korea? >> absolutely not. because recently they have been adding gasoline to this fire. they sold to the north koreans mobile missile launchers. we are worried about mobile missiles, those two. >> clayton: right. >> the chinese had sold the north koreans mobile missile launchers.
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this is the one that can attack the united states. you know, we don't have missile defense for north korea's longest range missiles because those take, you know, weeks to sort of assemble. test fuel. we need missile events for the mobile missiles because we can't reliably find them. china has been enabling the north koreans ely to attack the united states. that's -- and we don't have these conversations with china in public. we need to. >> tucker: very quickly you saw the white house spokesman jay carney say he would not be surprised if north korea launched a missile. i'm not sensing panic from the white house. should would he be he seeing panic? >> i don't think we should be panicking. clearly what we need are some tougher policies. we have the secretary of state going to beijing on the 13th of of this month. we shouldn't be going there he we should be giving them tough messages. by going there, we feed their already inflated sense of ego. they think we are sort of weak by actually having to go to beijing instead of them coming to washington. why can't they come to washington? martin dempsey, chairman of the joint chief of staffs
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is going to beijing at the end of this month. this follows jack lew who was there last month. this is really wrong. >> clayton: gordon chang, thanks for being here. always great. more "fox & friends" when we come back. grab some coffee. wake up grandma. [ male announcer ] ah... retirement. sit back, relax, pull out the paper and what? another article that says investors could lose tens of thousands of dollars in hidden fees on their 401(k)s?! seriously? seriously. you don't believe it? search it. "401(k) hidden fees." then go to e-trade and roll over your old 401(k)s to a new e-trade retirement account.
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>> headlines for you. a fox news alert. overnight, a powerful 7.0 magnitude earthquake rocking a remote part of indonesia. it hit in the mountains but still caused people in nearby towns to run outside in panic. there are no reports this morning of any injuries or damage. and the 149 traffic air traffic control towers scheduled to be shut down tomorrow because of sequester cuts will stay up and running at least until june. the faa stop those cuts all
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together. >> alisyn: thanks so much, tucker. recent disasters on crews ships like triumph. many travelers are reluctant to gone oboard. what can do you if you bought a ticket and you don't want to go. the travel lions media great to have you here. >> thanks, alisyn. >> my mother and stepfather are leaving on a cruise next week. >> good for them. >> they have had tickets for a linger time. in light of all of the things that we have heard lately, going wrong on cruises, if they wanted to cancel, which they don't, but for people who have gotten cold feet and do want to cancel, is there any canceling now. >> as long as they booked it far enough out going to a europe cruise 90 days out they can still cancel and get their money back under cruise policies. each crews line is different vow to look at each one. as you get closer to the
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departure date unless you have travel insurance. that's something you want to consider on every no matter what you are booking for travel. >> alisyn: if you have travel insurance and you either want to get out of a cruise or you are on a cruise that goes awry, you get your money back? >> not necessarily. what you have to do is look at what that insurance is there is trip interruption insurance. there is cancel for any reason insurance. just like every other insurance policy, you have got to read between the lines. i always say talk to a travel professional because they can basically separate the wheat from the chief of staff this comes to that. >> alisyn: that helps. nowadays book things online. used to be able to sort it out. >> they are not the old days anymore. they still book 70% of cruises and tours and 60% of international airline tickets. people forget that a lot of people who went to the web are going back to traditional travel agents for that reason. so much information out there. how do they sort through it all. >> alisyn: one of the things that we learned during awful these crews nightmares in addition to the raw sewage and the food shortages that we have
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heard tell of is that some of these crews ships, all of them maybe have these ironclad contracts. >> correct. >> alisyn: where even if something goes nightmare irishly wrong you can't sue them. >> your liability is very limited as a cruise line. you have to read that contract which is pretty detailed. again, talk to a professional. because they know the ins and outs of those contracts. at the end of the day, unless you declare your valuables on board when you get on board you are going to be limited. if you want to sue them like the costa concordia disaster you have to go to italy to bring a lawsuit. a lot of these crews lines are registered in other country i -- countries and that's where the legal implications take place. >> alisyn: because these latest mishaps have prices gone down. >> right now we have saw a report close in bookings for carnival the prices have dropped. the other guys not so much. carnival is feeling it more than anybody else. >> alisyn: they have had more of the disaster. >> they have been in the news. they did a good job reacting to the latest
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issue. they can't catch a break. the triumph broke free from morgues, there were 65 mile-per-hour winds. that's not a ship that's failing or carnival issue. it's a ship yard issue. that puts them back in the spotlight so that's a challenge. >> alisyn: you think it's a good time to buy a crews. >> absolutely. the prices have come down. there are 0 million people took a crews last year. when you hear about the bad stuff. there is some great vacations. your parents are taking a crews, right? they love them. >> alisyn: thank you so much. we appreciate your expertise. >> thank you. >> alisyn: the cost of being beautiful. it won't just hit your pocketbook, ladies, it will shorten your life. women put makeup on just to spend a 2 days of their life taking it off. break down all of the numbers of how long it takes to you beautify next. and should your child's school performance determine whether or not you can get welfare benefits? where this could soon be law. arigato!
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harris the best-looking attorney general ever and after the comment, the secret service added extra security to protect the president from first lady michelle. [ applause ] >> got a little tricky. >> >> alisyn: oh to be a good-looking woman, ladies, you know it's very, very hard. it's very costly and it's time consuming. >> clayton: this is shocking. a new study out this morning shows just how much time the average -- now the average female. not even the mark of beauty like this over here. >> alisyn: high maintenance. >> clayton: high maintenance over here takes to get ready remarkable number of days that women spend their entire lives getting ready to the tune of 578 total days of their lives getting ready in the morning or afternoon. >> tucker: before we get into the tales here i want to raise a lone voice in support of it. it matters. female is one of women's great gifts. everyone is against this
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but i'm just not. >> i love the all natural. >> alisyn: do you really? >> clayton: when alisyn rolls in the sweatpants like she just came from yoga class you look great. >> alisyn: wow. >> clayton: then it's when all of the makeup and the hair and all of that comes into being that you just kind of go i remember the all naturale alisyn. >> alisyn: it takes a lot of time and money for me to look this natural. here is the thing. ladies, have you spoken. this is the cost of beauty. okay. so you can see how many days you are dedicating to whatever service you are -- body moisture rising. 44 days. that's soft skin. here is what you hate the most from this new survey. you detest shaving your legs. >> clayton: that's shocking. >> alisyn: women do not like shaving their legs. number two women don't like styling their hair it takes 294 days off your life.
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and then also we are not fond of plucking our eyebrows, that's number three. >> tucker: applying fake tan 12 days? >> alisyn: is that all? i have spent more time applying. >> tucker: fake and bake? >> clayton: image something about mary. 12 days in one day that nasty of an orange glow. >> tucker: most shocking statistic in here only 63% of women take their makeup off every night. that cannot be good. >> clayton: pillow full of makeup and mascara on there? [alisyn whistling] >> alisyn: i want to take off my makeup. i'm tired. sometimes you come home, if you go out to dinner and it's possible you might have a glass of wine. i come home and like fall into my pillow, makeup on and i walk up and there is a print of my face on the pillow'.
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>> tucker: like a cast. >> clayton: is it worth it all of these days devogted to this. where does it get you in the end? you have already got a great husband. >> tucker: not about the man. it's about impressing other women. >> clayton: bingo. >> tucker: they are not interested in your approval. they are interested in the approval of their peers. >> when men walk in disshelved mess. unshaven track pants. >> alisyn: i look like that during the week too unshaven, track friends. >> clayton: if you are out lady friends. the women look at the other women. eye them up and down. >> tucker: much more than men do. >> see the shoes and up to the top she decided to wear that today? >> tucker: beats up on construction workers and smoking and making obligor gling girls. not true. it's women who do that? >> alisyn: women don't cat call each other. i would go out to my husband to dinner with no
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makeup on sooner than i would go out to a mom's night with no makeup on. >> tucker: caddie call. >> alisyn: will you spare me the sexist rant you are on right now? >> clayton: part of my one night comedy tour down at the funny bone. [cat meow] >> alisyn: part of your charm. get to your headlines. let us know what your least favorite grooming habit is? >> clayton: send us pictures. >> alisyn: here are your evidence lines. start with a very serious story. white supremacist gang story arrested in connection with colorado prison chief will make first court appearance monday. james lore was arrested yesterday brief chase with police. investigators believe lore was in contact with gang associate evan ebel days before the murder of tom clements. police think killed before killed in a shootout. authority are still looking for fellow gang member thomas goalie.
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rutgers could lose major money -- per netty, that's better. why don't you -- well, should a family's welfare assistance be based on its child's classroom performance? that's the call from a bill proposed by tennessee senator stacy canfield. it says if kids do not maintain satisfactory progress in school, the family's assistance will be slashed up to 30%. he says it will help hold parents accountable for their kids' work. the bill has passed committees in both the state house and the senate and could soon be voted
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into law. all right. let's check this out. home video of prince charles and a baby. the video titled prince charles at home shows queen elizabeth playing with her baby boy in the living room. then the young prince ventures outside on his own. the royal family released several videos online as part of a celebration of the british film industry. what a cute little kid. >> clayton: like one of the only cameras available at the time. >> alisyn: apparently. >> clayton: that is cool to see. let's check in with rick. you grew up in that generation you didn't have growingilm of like up like the wonder years. >> rick: it didn't look like that either. >> clayton: it looked like shirley temple. >> rick: wasn't hand videos. ' i have seen some ai home videos when she was a kid and they had that antique quality to them.
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>> alisyn: bidding setting up. >> clayton: early 1990s when you were a kid? like like in my archives. we will find it cold, very chilly again across much of the northern third of the country take a look at the weather maps. snow we will see flying from around parts of wisconsin this morning and in towards michigan. you see the cold temps still there. 48 in atlanta into april that's well below where you typically should be. it's all about to change across the east. we are going to warm up. yesterday was kind of ended up being a beautiful day across the northeast. temps drop a bit today by around another 5 to 6 degrees. cooler today but tomorrow will be spectacular and that will be the case the next few days. down to the south enjoy today. things are looking nice. mostly mild conditions and a lot of sunshine. tomorrow we start to see the rain move in across parts of kansas and oklahoma and then we deal with a big storm that we have got on tap for monday, tuesday, and wednesday all across the plains. get ready into the northern
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plains, you will see that snow we are dealing with and cool temperatures. 39 in fargo. everybody up in fargo sandbagging and getting ready for the red river to flood again this year. it's becoming a routine for them. then out across areas of the west, we will see plenty of sunshine down across areas of the southwest. there is that snow and rain you see in the pacific northwest. that is the next big storm. snow up in denver across nebraska. all right, guys. back to you inside. >> thank you, coming up. a real life minority report. >> one female, male, white, 40s. time frame? >> 13 minutes. >> how new technology could soon help prevent crime before it happens. the science behind this amazing innovation coming up. >> alisyn: lights are dimmed on another major tradition. shakeup is changing family portraits forever. do we have a mower?
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no. a trimmer? no. we got nothing. we just bought our first house, we're on a budget. we're not ready for spring. well let's get you ready. very nice. you see these various colors. we got workshops every saturday. yes, maybe a little bit over here. this spring, take on more lawn for less. not bad for our first spring. more saving. more doing. that's the power of the home depot. black friday is back but not for long. right now get bonnie 4 and 5 inch herbs and vegetables, 5 for $10.
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we asked total strangers to watch it for us. thank you so much. i appreciate it. i'll be right back. they didn't take a dime. how much in fees does your bank take to watch your money? if your bank takes more money than a stranger, you need an ally. ally bank. your money needs an ally. we don't let frequent heartburn
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come between us and what we love. so if you're one of them people who gets heartburn and then treats day afr day... block the acid with prilosec otc and don't get heartburn in the first place! [ male announcer ] e pill eachmorning. 24 hours. zero heartbur >> alisyn: 45 minutes past the hour. time for quick headlines. a sad day for people who love family portraits like tucker carlson. all portrait studios at sears stores closed without warning. cpi corporation which also runs studios at wal-mart and other locations gave no explanation for the quick shutdown. sears portrait studios have been operating since 1959. and there is a new baby bump in hollywood. actress halle bury and fiance oliver martinez are expecting. we are told the 46-year-old is about three months along and is having a boy. berry has a 5-year-old daughter with ex-boyfriend not seen there.
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clayton? >> thanks, ali. well, in the movie minority report actor tom cruise plays a cop prevents crimes by stopping them before they ever happen. remember this? >> what's coming? double homicide. one male, one female. killer is male, white, 40s. >> set up a perimeter. >> i'm placing you under arrest for the future murder of sara martin. >> clayton: one scientist on the verge of brain scan predict criminal behavior before criminal act ever take place. how might this change our justice system. the neuroscientist who led this study. associate professor of psychology and neuroscience at the university of mexico. evidence joins us this morning from alba cureky. nice to see you this morning. >> hi, thanks very much for having me. >> why did you set about to do this type of research? what did you hope to accomplish? >> well, the criminal justice system has to make extremely difficult decisions every day about how to determine if an inmate is ready for release under what conditions to
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make that release. and so the federal judges that i work with and, you know, doing education with them about science in the courtroom, they have this problem they really want to understand what's the best way it to understand risk. and so this study was motivated to try to help understand what are the brain symptoms that might convey risks in the future. >> clayton: you studied 96 male felons who have a record, of course, and used brain scans. you found some interesting information when you looked at these 9 of felons. tell our awfd yens about this. >> well, impulsivity, for example, is, you know is, a construct that tends to predict recidivism. so i could have you fill out a pen and paper test and tell me about your impulsivity or i could have you do games that tell me how impulsive you are in your decision-making. what we did in this study is went in and measured brain function using mri scanner while inmates will were doing a task and brain systems. what we found is when we followed them out four years, is that the brain
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scan actually predicted better than any other measure the brain scan measure of impulsivity who was going to reoffend vs. who was not going to reoffend. >> clayton: is there a potential for law enforcement to use this to predict crime. under what circumstances might an individual be forced by the government, i suppose, to be put on some sort of mri to find out if they are likely to commit a crime again? and could this lead to them being held in prison, released from prison early? >> i think it's a little premature to be using this already in law enforcement it was the first time that we have been actually able to use a brain scan tore predict recidivism. our real goal or hope for the work is that because we found systems that we think we can kind of increase or fix or repair, if you will, that there might be some really neat avenues for different treatments that can be developed that could help them remediate the chances that the offender could reoffend when they get out. >> clayton: could you come to our studio and predict whether or not alli, tucker and i will eat pastry later
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in the show? >> i might be able to show which one of you like pastries the most but actually predicting, that's one of things trying to do. >> clayton: it is impulse control around here. fascinating research. keep us up to date on that. >> thank you. >> clayton: if you want to read more about this story go to the verge.com. they have a great deal about it americans have spoken. and they have ranked the most important issues facing the nation. is the mainstream media listening or just pushing its own agenda. men, it looks like you are permanently in the dog house. women love their dogs more than you. not surprising. that story straight ahead. hey. they're coming. yeah. british. later.
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>> tucker: welcome back. the pollsters at gallup asked americans what do you think is the most important problem facing facing face eco. the economy is cited as the most important by the most people. people listed gun control at the very bottom of the list, the least important. are these priorities reflected in the mainstream media? let's ask washington examiner columnist and author of spin masters david who joins us from d.c. david, good morning. >> good morning, tucker. >> tucker: you see the disconnect between the issues that the people care about and the issues the press covers. what accounts for that? >> for one thing, when you see the media seize upon something that they think is such an important idea like gun control, they take on this advocacy role, especially in a case like that. just absolutely doggedly pursuing it at the expense, perhaps, of covering things that people are more concerned with like the fact that still don't have a job and it's been yet
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another month with a lousy jobs report. >> tucker: labor force participation rate is the lowest since 197, the carter administration. >> yeah. >> tucker: that's not likely to be a media obsession for the next month, is it? >> i don't think so. it is interesting tucker when you look at the way the media covers the jobs picture when there is a republican president. we would be hearing if we had one right now. if we had george w. bush in office. i think we would be more likely to hear about a jobless recovery. seeing stories about how far corporate profits are higher and there are no jobs being created and it has something to do with government policy. but because you have obama in office, it doesn't quite fit that at this typical liberl narrative. you end up with more of just kind of wow, the economy is still bad, what can we do about it? or even the story that just says the unemployment rate came down. isn't that a good thing? >> i noticed that gay issues, gay marriage, civil unions, gays in the military, didn't even make this list. and, yet, the "new york
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times," which even today still sets the agenda for the allot of the rest of the media covers gay marriage and gay issues on the front page every week, multiple, multiple stories. why? >> yeah. didn't get 1% in the gallup poll is the most important thing to at least 1% of the people surveyed didn't make that list. it's not even there. you know, again, there you have a case where clearly a paper like the "new york times," the "the washington post," several of the most prominent liberal newspapers in america have decided this is an agenda that he are definitely going to try to push. they want to see certain social changes and that's what you are seeing in the way that they are covering the supreme court cases on that issue. >> tucker: right. this is the next civil rights movement. i wonder if maybe a little diversity in the newsroom might help. most reporters are from exactly the same coastal secular background. maybe that accounts for this disconnect. >> in fact. this is exactly what i write about in chapter one of spin masters. when you go in and 90% of your colleagues at work vote and think exactly the
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same way, you don't have an environment or you don't have a group of people reporting the political news of this country that is very reflective of america. in fact, it would be hard to find a less representative sample of people out there. if you went to san francisco or cambridge and rounded up a couple people standing around in the town square. you would be more likely to find conservatives in those places than you are in many media newsrooms according to the surveys that have been done. >> tucker: i would mandate that 20% of newsroom has to be from wyoming and south dakota, see if that would effect the coverage. great to see you this morning, david. thanks. >> thanks for having me tucker. >> clayton: coming up. first it was illegal immigrant and now the associated press is revising that term. islamist. will the pc police ever take a day off? don't you count on it. plus, nasa has got our idea straight out of star trek and the obama administration wants to spend millions to make it happen. we will tell you what it is coming up.
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>> alisyn: good morning, everyone. it's april 6th. i'm alisyn camerota. thanks for joining us this morning. the economy only creating 88,000 jobs. who is the white house blaming? or what, i should say? well, it's the sequester. is that even possible? we'll do the math. you report -- no. we'll report. >> clayton: don't leave it up to them. we'll do the work. >> tucker: we'll report, you decide. >> alisyn: that's better. >> tucker: thank you. the associated press changing the way you get your news. first they dump the term illegal immigrants dump the term now they are revising the term islamist. wait until you hear w. >> clayton: she is only 15 years old she may be the best defense against gun
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control. >> by signing this legislation you are not signing away gun violence liberating citizens of our constitutional rights. >> clayton: we will hear from the young teenager taking the internet by storm. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. you are watching "fox & friends" the best show to watch while you are putting on your pants. >> alisyn: when do you do these voiceovers? >> clayton: when i'm putting on my pants. >> tucker: i can tell. >> clayton: good morning, everyone. welcome into auto "fox & friends." eye clayton morris, that's alisyn camerota and tucker carlson. you are tan and. >> tucker: rested and ready. >> clayton: you got back into new york city when we got these terrible jobs numbers. so while it seems like it was -- we had this spring air, everyone is getting excited about summer and we to the these terrible jobs numbers and you think gosh, are we ever going to get out of this thing now that we only put in about 88,000
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new jobs this past quarter? >> tucker: it is so noticeable. if you go outside washington, new york, washington, dallas, big hubs, go to the middle of the country rural areas, it's hallowed out. the number of boarded up stores or closed car dealerships, restaurants with windows broken. i mean, parts of this country are really hurting. and you just dent get a sense of it at all. i don't watching television. >> alisyn: why were the numbers so much lower than expected and lower than the previous month? well, the administration has a theory, the chairman of the president's chief of economic council alan krueger says you know what? you have to realize these are the first numbers that have come out since sequester. let's listen. >> i step back whenever the jobs figures come out and look at it in the larger context over the last three months we have added half a million jobs. over the last 37 months the private sector has added jobs each month. we want to speed job creation, given how many
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jobs were lost in the economic crisis. and we certainly want washington to avoid making self-inflicted wounds like the sequester. i think the economy is poised to expand at a faster rate if washington can get its act together. if we could avoid policies like the sequester, which are going to -- is going to cut key investments in health research and education, other fields and not address our deficit problems. >> tucker: it's scary how coordinated the white house message is even from people who should be working on policy like criewg his or her is head from the president's jobs council. they are reading off the same song sheet. in this case it's just false, actually. the sequester hasn't. those furloughs haven't taken effect sufficient to cause these numbers. you saw just under half a million people drop out of the civilian workforce last month. only 300 million people in the entire country. bill. >> alisyn: here are the numbers. >> to quote bill o'reilly. it's bologna the idea that
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this sequester would have effected the numbers on the screen here. 496,000 fewer in the labor force. 63%. lowest level since 1979. cathy busconich an economist, a unin of economists came out at the latter part of the week saying any idea that the sequester was to blame for these numbers is bologna. here is what she said. what is even more troubling about the most recent slowdown is that it takes place even before the sequester cuts materially hit the economy. our view that the estimated 3.5% real g.d.p. growth in q 1 is not likely to be sustained. instead we see the overall economy led by the consumer down shifting significantly in the second quarter. struggling to get close to 1% real growth. >> alisyn: that's not a good sign. she is from a non-advocacy group a not for profit group. there is no agenda in her crunching of the numbers there the cbo though says the sequester will at some
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point, they have predicted, have an effect on unemployment. they say that it will cut 750,000 jobs by the end of the year. but not yet. >> clayton: construction jobs one of the big indicators of the economy's health and growth. you see buildings being put up. to your point when you are out across the country seeing boarded up buildings, you see a lot of construction cranes out there either? >> no. >> clayton: seems like construction plummeted. >> tucker: you see them in washington, d.c. the seed of government is growing. let me make the obvious point. with numbers like these and with the projected growth rate as she just said under 1% going forward, how can we have a dow at you a time highs? the stock market ought to reflect real gains in productivity. i don't see any other answer but fed policy. crnking out massive amounts of printed, basically fake money into the system making a small number of people rich, inflating the market to unsustainable levels, it's not real. bellayton: not a
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whether of the economy when you have banks getting richer. donald trump's big bailiwick to use a phrase from alisyn, is that the phrase you use he? can't stand that these big banks have this money infused by the federal government. the idea was to lend to small businesses to get them back on their feet to get the borrowing that they could to actually hire folks. they are not borrowing. they are not lending out the money to these small business owners. so therefore wall street not a good indicator. >> it's scary. look at the stock market. the dow jones industrial is supposed to be a measure of what this country produces of our actual concrete productivity. and it's totally disconnected from that it seems like. >> alisyn: it's worrisome. let's go on and talk about something that the associated press has done to change their style book. the style book is what journalists look to as sort of the gold standard of what we should all be saying on the air and printing in paper. the associated press has done two major changes this week. the first was actually doing away with the term illegal immigrant. and then yesterday, later,
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they said that they are also changing the definition of the word islamist. >> clayton: here is what the original desks was in the a.p. style book on islamist which was a supporter of government in accord with the will yous of islam. those who view the koran as a political model encompass a wide range of muslims from mainstream politicians to militants known as jihadi. that will now be removed. the new definition says this: an advocate or supporter of a political movement that favors reordering government and society in accordance with laws prescribed by islam. they do not use as a synonym for islamic fighters militants, elm streamists or radicals or may or may not be jihadists. >> i would love to learn more about this change probably from cair and self-appointed watchdogs of this language. the problem of iter well pointed out book after book, when you lose precise
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words you loose the capacity to have precise thoughts. language is thinking. if you take away people's can't use certain words they can't form certain concepts. >> alisyn: i always found the word islamist confusing. like that always seemed like a fake word where people were trying to cobble together some sort of definition. why don't we call people terroristsically clay jihadists. >> alisyn: if they act to taser people. why don't we call them terrorists or whatever you want. that always seemed like an amall -- amall amall goal. >> tucker: specific one motivated by political islam. we have name for it. >> clayton: illegal immigrant they removed earlier in the week made little sense to me. stepping on semantic toes here. it would have made more sense to remove illegal alien. the term alien in and of itself think of space aliens. keep illegal immigrants which makes sense by law
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you are talking about the behavior of being illegal in this country. it's not the person. that made more sense. but illegal alien makes less sense. >> tucker: it's more precise. >> alisyn: rationale for that part of ongoing process of riding the style book of labels. >> tucker: looked for armed robber to be taken out next month and replaced by wealth redistribution activist or something. it's ridiculous. >> clayton: robin hood from now on. >> alisyn: all right. left us know your thoughts on all of this. headlines and tell us what's happening at this hour. more threats from north korea this morning. advising foreign embassies in their capital to evacuate. this is new video of dictator kim jong un firing a gun during military drills. north korea now warning that it cannot guarantee the safety of diplomats if fighting were to break out there. some experts say to crack down on north korea the u.s. needs stronger policies on china.
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>> over the course of decades our policy in north korea in stopping their nuke weapons has been a failure. if we want better results we need better tactics and those tactics start with better policy on china. >> alisyn: just more tough talk. former cia head david petraeus. the feds reportedly interviewing him at his home in arlington, virginia as part of the ongoing investigation into his extra marital affair. resigned as cia director last year after his affair with biography paula broadwell was revealed. the feds are trying to determine if broadwell received classified information. and high honors for her rockie soldier who helped save his fellow troops in the line of fire. sergeant was awarded the silver star for his 2010 rescue. while in afghanistan, his unit was bombed. sergeant suffered a traumatic brain injury but still led the evacuation of other wounded soldiers. after receiving his silver star. he immediately reenlisted
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in the army to serve as an officer helping other wounded soldiers those are your headlines. >> clayton: get over to rick reichmuth who has a check of our first alert forecast. >> rick: a busy week weatherwise. everybody is going to be watching it for severe weather and snow all across the central part of the country. eastern part of the country you are looking great. we do have troubles across the far northern tier of the country in across the up of michigan and wisconsin. and michigan as well. we will see maybe a few inches of snow, especially in the up. otherwise scattered showers moving through here throughout the day today. out across the west though. this is our next storm that's moving in. this is going to be the big weather maker. temperaturewise we have got the heat that's set up across parts of the south and into the plains and it's looking good. still cool across much of the northern tier. tomorrow we start to warm up in across parts of the east and stay that way for the next few days. you see hints of this blue coming. in that's the colder air that's going to move in and cause a conflict of the two air masses and cause the
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severe weather that we're going to be seeing monday, tuesday and wednesday. here is how this sets up at this point. right here in across parts of nebraska and kansas and oklahoma. this is your monday threat for severe weather. mostly, i think hail and wind. tuesday, we start to see a better chance for some tornadoes and maybe some large tornadoes, more dangerous type of tornadoes. that's still across parts of eastern kansas into missouri. parts of oklahoma and texas. and mane heading in towards arkansas and it could go overnight into the overnight tuesday night into wednesday and wednesday we see this across parts of the mid mississippi river valley. point out behind this very big snow. we are talking about a foot and a half possibly of snow from places like denver up towards the panhandle of nebraska. so winter not done yet either. guys? >> clayton: the groundhog officially wrong. >> rick: what was that like three months ago? >> clayton: so mean beating up. >> clayton: fire him. >> rick: better than me. >> clayton: coming up on the show. moments ago we shared those dismal job numbers with you proving our economy is still in trouble.
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next guest says it's the president's biggest failure and is he here to explain why. >> alisyn: plus, member, it looks like you're permanently in the dog house. turns out women love their dogs more than you. that story straight ahead. clay clarify a lot of men watching this nodding their heads yes. [ male announcer ] in blind taste tests, even ragu users chose prego. prego?! but i've been buying ragu for years. [ thinking ] i wonderhat other questionable choices i've made? [ club scene music ] [ sigh of relief ] [ male announcer ] choose taste. choose prego.
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>> dismal job numbers glaring sign that our economy is nowhere close to recovering unfortunately. that's not the story the president is selling. >> right now we are still fighting our way from the worst economic crisis since the great depression. >> we are going through the
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worst economic crisis since the great depression. >> after the worst economic crisis since the great depression. >> right now our country is fighting our way back from the worst crisis since the great depression. >> even if you doubled the actual g.d.p. growth number under president obama it would be the worst record of any president in the last 60 years. as obama's fundamental transformation making this country better? peter is a former white house senior staff member under george h.w. bush. currently the director of entitlement and budget policy for the heartland institute. thanks a lot for joining us. >> glad to be here. >> tucker: these unemployment numbers seem stubbornly high and labor force participation numbers seems remarkably low. give us some precedent for. this how bad is the president's record relative to other presidents? >> well, when the president obama entered office, he never tires of telling us that the economy was in recession. he fails to mention that it was in his 13th month. when he entered office the recession was already in
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its 13th month. the longest recession since the great depression was 16 months. so the recession was about to end when he entered office. and in fact it did end according to the national bureau of economic reserve just a few months after he ended office in june of 2009. the problem is not the recession but that his recovery worst recovery since the great depression. there has been 11 previous recessions before this latest one. and the recovery from obama -- from the latest recession, the recovery under president obama is the worst of all of those recessions. the worst of any president in the last 75 years. in terms of jobs, in terms of economic growth. as you mentioned obama's term even if you doubled the economic growth in obama's term. it still would be the worst performance of any president since the great depression and any other recession. >> now, we have spent, the frahm federal government spent trillions of dollars
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trying to buy its way out of this slump. that hasn't worked. what do you think would have happened if the president hadn't adopted that approach and just sort of stood back. >> that's where he went wrong. he took america back to the old fashioned ainsian economics of the 1930s and the 1970s. that was given up for dead by ronald reagan 40 years ago. and what reagan did to get us out of the troubles of the 1970s was to adopt a new modern supply side economics. kansan economics is a dock tran you if that sounds nuts it is. it's never worked since then: in america or anywhere else around the world. and obama is to be faulted for taking america back to that old keynesian doctrine. he talks and acts as if
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he -- i call it rip vanwinkle economics as if he was completely asleep and doesn't know anything that's happened in the united states since 1980. he has done exactly the opposite of everything reagan did to get the economy booming again. he leads us to overlook that we had a 25-year economic boom that started under reagan in 1982 to 2007. steve moore calls the greatest wealth creates in the history of the planet that was created by doing everything the opposite of what obama is doing. >> tucker: i wish i had the president's cell phone i would give it to you so you could call him and alert him to all of us. thank you for joining us. that was interesting. >> thank you. >> tucker: nasa has idea straight out of star trek and the obama administration wants to spend millions to make it happen. we will tell what you it is. jurassic park is back. is it worth the extra price for 3-d? hank heaven kevin mccarthy is here next to tell us. be right back.
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obama's budget that he is set to reveal next week.
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they hope to put it in orbit around the moon and we could land on it and study it. >> alisyn: asteroid? >> clayton: what could go wrong. would've at -- woof at first sight when they met their pet. only a fourth met boyfriend or husband. >> tucker: truest story. >> clayton: your wife feels that way? >> tucker: my wife likes me a lot but loves my dog. >> alisyn: 20 years after wringing jurassic park to the big screen stephan spielburg anniversary release this time with a popping 3-d technology. >> tucker: i was about to say, clayton, movie critic kevin mccarthy joins us with the insider review on that. >> clayton, tucker and alisyn it's an honor to geeing out with you. thank you for having me.
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>> clayton: this is shocking to me. i feel so old that jurassic park has been out for 20 years. had you a chance to talk to stephan spielberg i guess a few years ago about doing this in 3-d and so in many ways was this your idea? >> no. it was not my idea. i sat downelberg in 2011 before they officially announced they were actually doing jury was sick park in 3-d. we had this very interesting geeky discussion. check out this interview. >> good to see. >> you see you again. oh my gosh. hypothetically if you could have had that 3-d technology and shot one of your earlier films and used that depth of field, what film would it be and what scene do you think would have benefited from having that depth. >> the only movie that i have directed that i would liked to have made in 3-d was the first jury was sick park because that was such an immemberrive experience and the dinosaurs were so -- we played with space and depth just with
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lighting. especially when the t rex comes into the rear view mirror of the jeep that's trying to escape it there is such 3-d opportunities. >> what was that moment for you as a film maker where you felt like you hit a wall and you broke through it and you succeeded? >> i think a big moment for me hitting the wall was jury was sick park again. i was happy to use the stop motion technique of clay immigration dinosaurs. we have discovered a brand new medium which is to create dinosaurs on the computer which would be smooth and real and not jerky. >> that was biggest hurdle i was gambling a lot of the universal's money on brand new technology that had never been tested to create leading characters, conceptually leading animal characters to launch a film. that was the greatest risk i have ever undertaken. >> alisyn: that's cool stuff. was that prophetic or was he already working on this and planning it?
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>> i know they hadn't officially announced it yet. that was the geekiest moment i have ever had in my life sitting across from that man. it was absolute honor. seeing it in 3-d now it is one of the best 3-d conversions i have ever seen in my entire life it is worth seeing in 3-d. this movie was made 20 years ago and it looks like a 2013 film. the dinosaurs are only in the movie for 15 minutes. but they feel like they are in the film the entire time because the effects are so well done. i recommend it in 3-d for sure. >> clayton: i was going to ask you if anything suffered as a result of transition. take these 3-d films. bring them back and make more money out of it. when you watching this film 20 years ago you wished it was in 3-d. did anything suffer at all. >> not at all. the t rex scene you feel like you are in that car with elm. this the kitchen scene with the raptors. it is unbelievable experience. it's almost scarier with the sound and everything seeing it on screen again. i was blown away by the 3-d
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effects. >> amazing. kevin mccarthy. that is a strong recommendation that i plan to take i highly recommend it. >> kevin, is it out now? >> it's out now. it came out yesterday in 3-d. i highly recommend checking it out for sure. >> sweet. >> alisyn: great to sigh you. >> thank you for being on. thank you so much. >> she is only 15 years old. she may be the best defense against gun control. listen. >> by signing this legislation you are not signing away gun violence with you instead liberating american citizens of our constitutional rights clay. >> tucker: we. >> clayton: we will hear young teenager taking the app. by -- net by storm. >> tucker: garden guide next. ♪ she thinks my tractor's sexy ♪ it really turns her on. ♪ she is always staring at me. suddenly, she does something unexpected
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>> where does the square go? [ laughter ] >> clayton: that's great. >> alisyn: she is a problem solver this toddler. >> tucker: that's smart. >> that's what you want to sees a a parent. she is not going to be stopped by a square peg in a round hole. >> i can't put that star in there. you know what's easier? i will rip the lid off this
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thing. >> tucker: shy will be president. >> clayton: that going viral. many hits on youtube because of it. one smart kid. >> alisyn: let's talk about another kid taking the country by storm. a 15-year-old girl named sarah merkel she was testifying in front of her state lawmakers about how she does not believe that any more gun control, any more legislation is the answer she gun enthusiast herself. she has the statistics and the argument to be pretty convincing. it has also gone viral about how she thinks that they are going way overboard in actually affecting her future. >> clayton: she was on "fox & friends." she is calling on congress to act on this legislation. take a listen to sarah. >> everybody is really upset about this. it takes away our own sense of security and defense against any attackers that we have. and it won't let me shoot anymore. i hope legislators somewhere are listening and they are hearing this and they realize that this gun control legislation really
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isn't going to get us anywhere and that maybe they can stop it. >> tucker: preventing sarah merkel from shooting sporting clays is going to make us safer this is gun laws state of maryland pushed by the governor of that state and they are about to be signed. they will, in effect, prevent normal people from duck hunting with their kids. shooting sporting clays doing things that ought to be legal. century precedent behind them. it's insane. >> alisyn: she makes the point that chicago is having murder -- a spate of murets at the moment. they have strict gun control laws and only 1% of the 3371 people killed in chicago over the last decade were by rifle. so, the so-called assault rifle ban wouldn't effect what's happening in chicago was her point.
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i interviewed the mayor of philadelphia about this. he would say the problem in this city illegal handguns. the number of murders, philadelphia not far behind chicago by the way for the number of murders. those guns coming in from outside cities. they are illegal has nothing to do with rifles owned by sport owners who are out there shooting. >> tucker: even handguns. criminals don't obey the laws that's why they are criminals. go to some state sponsored course where you sit in a classroom all day. they have no effect. no serious person thinks that has effect. >> alisyn: new york's murder rate has gone down. though new york does have strict gun control. >> tucker: it always has. in fact, it's loosened up and the crime rate went down for no connection to gun control at all. >> alisyn: multiturd approach. of the police commissioner believes they did lots of things including outreach to teenagers, including cracking down on traffickers. loss of things. my point is other cities should follow the model.
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>> tucker: follow wyoming's models one of the lowest crime rate in the world. drive through gun store. >> clayton: also fewer than a few million people living in wyoming. can you drive miles and not see a human being. >> clayton: very few murders in jackson hall. >> alisyn: i would love to hear what you think about this and sarah merkel's plea to her state legislators. let's get your headlines. an ohio family was rescued after spending a terrifying night in the middle of alligator infested waters. the shrek family was on vacation and borrowed an air boat to explore the everglades but after a few hours they got stuck in some roots. >> took a wrong turn. this is the first time i have been out here. so, obviously as a novice on this body of probably not the thing to do. >> massive search was launched family crews scouring more than a thousand acres. the family used whistles and air horns until rescuers found them. no one was hurt.
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well, is this going to be another solyndra, government backed car maker fisker laying off 7 a% of the workforce. rumors are swirling that the company may file for bankruptcy. all this as fisker must repay part of it's 192-million-dollar loan department of energy. the maker of a plug in hybrid sports car fisker was supposed to be part of america's clean energy fizzled.t sales >> back in all of this garbage that doesn't work and destructive and they're about all going out of business. >> we are not investment banker we are country that doesn't dask its people. every time we make an investment it goes bad. >> alisyn: struggling to find buyer or investor before the loan payment comes due. a dog has adopted a baby lamb. 10-year-old lamb -- i'm sorry 10 day old lamb loves to curl up with the golden
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retriever and follows her whatever she goes. the pair run of the ranch horse rescue center. the owners say the two will be a great addition to their education project with area children. that's impossiblably adoocial. >> tucker: be impossibly. >> tucker: my wife just texted me i love you more than the dogs. that was false what i said. i love the fact that she is trying to reassure me. >> rick: that seems impossible. it is cold outside right now. time of year where i refuse to wear a jacket outside because it shouldn't be this cold but it is. 38 degrees something like that it says on the thermometer over there. take a look at the weather map. a couple things going on. talk about cold. we have snow headed in across parts of the central rockies and then in towards the high plains. get ready monday through wednesday. foot of snow. a couple little spots probably over 18 inches of snow. a big winter storm for
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areas and that's also going to be a severe weather maker monday through wednesday as well. continue to talk about that today's first alert forecast a cool one across much of the northeast but sunny. down to the southeast. plenty of sunshine as well and temps looking pretty good. enjoy today because conditions start to go down hilarity tomorrow and into monday. into the northern plains, see more snow this afternoon across parts of northeastern minnesota and parts of wisconsin and the up of michigan and then out across the west, the southwest you are looking quite nice. it's the northwest where you have got the snow that's coming on in. all right. clayton morris is there something you can do about this weather. >> i wish there was. i was outside getting the garden set up. we have a lot of questions about the garden this year. spring is here. if you are looking to spruce up your garden i have great app.s that can actually help do you this. these are some great ideas. >> rick: this is your weekly nerd segment for gardening. double nerd segment tonight. >> clayton: it's helpful. in your smart phone and
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tablet you have geo locations you can pinpoint where you are based on the climate you need to know what you can plant. i garden u.s.a. and basically gives you planting instructions on how to set up your garden knowing what seeds to plant based on your location, what time of year and how compatible certain plants are with your soil. >> rick: that's a big deal they go in and see stuff that's at the store and they think they can plant it but it's not always the case. you don't necessarily know what zone you live in. this helps you find that. >> clayton: pinpoint exactly if you have a lot of shade in a particular area or climate isn't good enough for getting the proper water in that spot. it knows where your geo location is basted on tablet and smart phone. another one is where to buy the stuff. home depot and home friends at home depot were kind enough to deck out the set. home depot app. shows you what your current account is like. order stuff from the application it can give you tips. they have great how to videos inside the app. shopping cart sent right to your house. go to the store and pick it up right at your location.
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>> show you what goes with what? >> yes. >> what plant grows well next to another plant. >> clayton: great tips and find out what other people have bought. might want to get this tressel with thing because it works out well. another great one to use is garden pro. it's an ios app. reference app. to help you plan and manage your garden. i use this and great setting up planters. want to line your backyard area. knowing what plants will line up so you know how to look ahead of time before you ahead and plant. $4 a great reference app. for your backyard. finally, my father-in-law runs one of the largest landscaping. california has a water problem. free application helps you program sprinkler system for free. so knows where you live. it knows how much water to water your lawns so you are not overwatering it. wasting water. killing plants. >> based on sprinkler times
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works just that well. really good. >> rick: really cool. nerd father-in-law. >> loves technology. go to foxnews.com and help you out. clayton moors coming up on where drunk walking may soon be banned this will ruin rick's night. >> minority lifeguards. tanning swim getting the job over better candidates. next guest says common sense is being thrown out the window all in the name of did diversity. we will hear from her straight ahead. more than two years ago,
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>> tucker: the city of phoenix is taking affirmative action to new levels or maybe just logical extension. recruiting minorities to be lifeguards at public pools even if they are not strong women swimmers it's all of course the service of the diversity cult. why wouldn't it go to people who can swim well? >> alisyn: joining us is strategist and editor and editor at black chic.com crystal wright. how are you crystal. >> good morning. how are you. >> alisyn: do you understand what phoenix is doing here they are trying to recruit minorities, blacks, hispanics, asians to come and be lifeguards at the city's 29 swimming pools, even if they are not really proficient swimmers. they say -- the city says they will train them to become good swimmers. >> if i was a parent, i'm probably put ons in the right now i'm not going to be sending my kids to swim in the phoenix public pools. but what's preprosper russ about this is i thought it
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was an april fools joke, right? and the reason that the city of phoenix gives is that there are too many white qualified lifeguards guys. and what we think is because mostly hispanics and blacks use our pool we need lifeguards that our swimmers can relate to. if you are drowning, you want to relate to a lifeguard who is going to save you, right, guys? >> tucker: that was the question. why do we care what color our lifeguards are? is there any real evidence, social science data that shows people don't want to be saved by people who have a different llweleyn -- mel linen content. >> all of us should be qualified jobs we hold. particularly at a pool you want a pool being safeguarded by a qualified lifeguard who can swim. phoenix is say na-na we would rather drown or risk people drowning in our pools all in the name of
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diversity. most perversing i have ever seen. >> let's be clear. not thinking they will put any of the kids at danger. what they are saying is the majority of the people who use their city pools are hispanic and black and asian and that there is a language barrier, they say, between the current white lifeguards and the population who uses the pool. >> how -- i'm a black american. i have no language barrier with a white person. i'm talking to you and tucker right now. we seem to be speaking english. they said, what i read, is that they want lifeguards that blacks and hispanics and, you know, some asians can relate to. i still don't understand when you are swimming you are not doing a whole lot of talking to the lifeguard. >> tucker: this is the same rationale that propped up jim crow for 80 years. you want to swim in a pool that look like you. sit on a bus. >> segregation. >> tucker: use the same water fountain as people that look like you it's diversity. >> my parents grew up during segregation, tucker.
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they didn't like having to be on the beach and at pools and seeing white people be able to use a different beach. so we're, once again, phoenix is making no sense and like you said, they are forcing some kind of segregation at the same time they are say well, no, we have too many white qualified lifeguards. this reminded me of mitt romney's binder full of women that media mocked. they are saying i want a binder of qualified women working in my cabinet because i had too many men. he wanted qualified candidates. that's what conservatives are about. that's common sense. this is irrational. it's not good for the safety of phoenix residents and really what they need to be doing is putting resources into swimming classes because i just want to end with this. s and blacks tend to not be as good swimmers as whites and many more black americans and hispanics actually those kids don't know how to swim. they don't have access to resources to learn how to swim. this is just putting not
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good. >> alisyn: thanks so much for being on crystal wright. thanks. >> thanks. >> tucker: a plane full of passengers diverted not because of a security threat but because of a movie one family didn't like what was being shown. do they have a case? using telemedical and mobile technologies, verizon innovators are connecting trauma surgeons to patients in the field. helping them get the attention they need, before they even reach the hospital. because the world's biggest challenges deserve even bigger solutions. powerful answers. verizon. well, dad, i spent my childhood living with monks learning the art of dealmaking. you've mastered monkey-style kung fu?
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no. priceline is different now. you don't even have to bid. master hahn taught you all that? oh, and he says to say (translated from cantonese) "you still owe him five bucks." your accent needs a little work.
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grounded over this movie. let's watch. >> fascinated by pain. inflicting pain is a true part of my true calling. >> you are sick and twisted. >> alisyn: you know what that does look inappropriate actually. that's a clip from the pg 13 alex cross. parents board the flight with their 4-year-old and their 8-year-old children complained about the film's explicit and violent content only to see their plane diverted to another
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location because they spoke up. joining us for a fair and balanced debate about this is arthur aidala fox news legal analyst and jonah. attorney. they have 4 and 8-year-old they say that's not appropriate. all of the movie screens you are subjected to it it you can't get your kids away from it. they complained to the flight attendant and said i don't want my kids watching this and the pilot then diverted and tossed them off the plane. >> yeah yeah jona. >> they did more than complain. they must have caused such a ruckus to have pilot inconvenience two other passengers because they couldn't get littley get a glimpse. where was the ipad? where was the x box? where was coloring books? >> susie. >> disney air? no it was not. >> alisyn: everybody should be subjected to it is sounds like what jona is saying. >> most of the movies if
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you remember now individual screen but old school used to be used to say this movie has been adapted for, you know, general viewing audience. you know, you sit there with your 8-year-old who is bored out of their mind and even with the ipad they start seeing sex hello. and this is knee jerk. this is egg shell reaction. of the captain, there is someone out here the plane goes down, oh my god! >> it wasn't like excuse me. >> i don't know if there were fits. thank you. i did he ever. >> alisyn: if you just object in a strongly worded claim to the flight attendant you get diverted. >> maybe some harsh language. >> it had to be more than a polite little excuse me please i don't like this movie. a pilot is not going to inconvenience 200 passengers over that. >> common sense has gone out the window. there have been nut jobs that have done horrible things. >> how do d. they know?
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>> 4-year-old and the 8-year-old may have something to do with it. are parents on a suicide mission? overreaction. >> win win that beg go. i'm over the hill. my body doesn't work the way it used to.
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>> good morning again, everyone. it's saturday, april 6th. i'm alisyn camerota. are we on the brink of more north korea foreign embassies to evacuate. this as new video surfaces of the north korea be leaders kim jong un doing something there. firing a gun. how should the u.s. react to this. governor huckabee has some thoughts straight ahead. >> then your child brings home bad grades so you lose your welfare benefits. >> does that sound like a good idea. where student performance could soon play a factor in entitlements. details ahead. so much the deadliest creatures in the world man size fish known to kill. that doesn't stop them from getting into the water with them. the star of river monsters is here. one of my sister-in-law's
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favorite shows. river monsters. "fox & friends" hour three starts right now. >> this is fozzy bear. >> and this is kermit the frog. and you are watching "fox & friends." fox and friends. >> alisyn: i love the municipalities. >> tucker: is that the municipalities? i couldn't tell if that was municipalities or one of our studio crew? [sigh] >> tucker: that video you keep showing of kim jong un waiving the handgun around and all of his loyal deputies have to act unafraid as he points it their direction? >> alisyn: that's right it does look threatening but not in the way that he wants it to look threatening. >> tucker: he looks like he has no idea what end the bullet comes out of. no great liter we are not afraid you will shoot us accidently. >> clayton: all these videos of him trying to show his power and in the military meeting rooms and now is he out there trying to shoot clay pigeons with a handgun.
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>> clayton: more on that story coming up. talk to governor huckabee about threats coming out of north korea. are they serious? do we need to worry? >> alisyn: get to the headlines because new details unfolding in the murder of a murder of a jakdz police detective. we know eric smith was shot four times with his own gun by a suspect that he was interrogating inside police headquarters. ed suspect was able to take it from smith during questioning and shoot him in the arm and chest and turn the gun on himself. amazing video of crews rescuing a stranded hiker in minnesota. the got trapped on a 700-foot ledge. a couple hiking in the area led searchers to her. they had to use a helicopter to lift her to safety. she was taken to the hospital to be checked out but is expected to be okay. vice president joe biden will not be joining his colleagues in giving back any of his nearly $231,000
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salary for the sequester for now that is. the vp will consider donating a portion to charity or returning portion to the treasury if any of his staff are furloughed. many high ranking officials have already announced they are giving back some of their salary to the government. people that love family portraits, our portrait studios at sears stores were closed without warning. [sigh] >> the corporation that runs studios at sears, wal-mart and other locations gave no explanation for this. they did release a statement on their web site saying, quote: we are sad to announce that all of our u.s. portrait studios are now closed. we appreciate your patronage in allowing us to capture your precious memories. where will we get our awkward family photos from now on. >> with the weird matted background glamour shelf. >> sun burst with. >> wagon wheel with a kitten. [ laughter ]
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>> tucker: some things in america are getting better. >> clayton: let's talk to governor mike huckabee who is here. we were talking governor at the top of the show. video of kim jong un with the handgun going out there. we hear more threats coming out of north korea that their embassies cannot be secure. they can't secure them out of fear of threats. what do you make of this? bluster? does the united states need to take these threats seriously or just trying to position themselves strongly around the world as an earth to see asia falling apart. we're going to step up and take the hymn. >> you know from, a distance, watching little kim is great entertainment. it's like baby huey car tunes. i mean be it's just amazing. this 29-year-old kid waving a gun around. obviously barely knowing which end to hold. i loved your analogy, tucker and description of these guards acting like they are not afraid. surely they don't put a loaded clip in that thing. but, you know, the truth is any infant playing with a
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loaded pistol is dangerous. you have to take that seriously. so we have got to look at little kim as like an infant playing with a pistol. he has a nuclear device. you know, this is a guy who may just be crazy enough to try to use it. >> alisyn: in other words, because is he a wild card is why we should be nervous? >> he is a wild card. you also have a lot of new leaders in the region who are untested. they can't be seen in the early stages of their own administrations of looking weak so the new south korea president. first female president south korea can't seen as afraid to stand up to little kim. now you have this aggravated situation. nobody knows what he might or can do. and you have to take all of that very, very sorriously. >> so it seems to me the two things you don't want are south korea to try to develop nuclear program and more importantly you don't want japan to try to rearm after 70 years. what is the obama administration doing that you tell to prevent those two things from happening.
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>> we don't really know. to be fair to the obama administration, i think they played it right by not trying to provoke little kim. you know. we can talk about it but the official government position needs to be -- the pressure has to be applied to the chinese. they are the parent. they are the only ones who can supervise little kim if they don't it can't be donget is he not going to listen to us. we have no diplomatic relations with them. the best we can do is send dennis rodman back for a little one-on-one. >> alisyn: please, haven't they suffered enough? >> clayton: gordon chang on says china is one of north korea's biggest allies they have sent them missiles on a regular basis. however, this has to be fearful for the chinese, they are not going to want to listen to us necessarily. how can we pressure the chinese. if you were president what would you be doing? >> you do sit down with the chinese and have a very close encounter of the most important kind. it's face to face and it's very face to face and you say you are making a lot of money off america. you are about to provoke
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something that's going to cost you. cost you a lot. and the fact is you are the only one who can intervene here and whether you do it quietly or whether you do it ringing bells we don't give a rip. we want you to sit on little kim and tell him he has got it stand down and stop. this let's do it so he can save face. this very important to people in the orient not to lose face. so we have to be careful not to say provocative things officially as a government to cause him to lose face to provoke him into doing something that he will do. not because it's rational. not because there is any strategic long term benefit to him. his people still eating long clippings because he has used all their food to make missiles. you have to do that in order to keep some level of peace and contain the very explosive situation that exists there. >> alisyn: governor, let's switch gears and talk about the decision by a federal judge this week to release the morning after pill over the counter. so now it can be available to anyone who wants it from
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teenagers, adolescents, whomever thinks they would want the morning after pill just by walking into a pharmacy. >> it's an outrageous decision by a federal judge in brooklyn. the irony of it is it happened in new york an 11-year-old can't get a 17-ounce soda. can't have transfats or salt. can't let her ear buds go too loud because the mayor would prohibit that but oh if she wants to take a very serious chemical. put it into her body that will change the molecular structure of her own system and potentially kill a growing embryo within her that's okay. >> alisyn: they say prevents conception does not terminate a pregnancy prevents conception. >> you are still taking a very serious chemical into your body. and, you you know, there are prescriptions that all of us take that, you know, we have to get a -- we have to go see a doctor. we don't get to prescribe ourselves. >> tucker: whether or not it's abortfacian end run
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around parents. >> of course, tucker. that's the point. mothers and fathers need to be involved in the decisions that involve something of this magnitude, the sexuality of a child. their sexual practices. whether they're promiscuous or not and the consequences of that and to make it easier for 11, 12, 13-year-old kids to be promiscuous is outrageous and it is an insult to parents. >> clayton: this federal judge also had some pretty harsh words for the obama administration. and it raises questions about whether or not a -- your cabinet level secretary in kathleen sebelius can sort of willie willy-nilly make these laws that effect children. this judge says this decision was playing politics. arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable. >> well, but what's he doing? was he not playing politics? is he a doctor? is he a phamacologist? i don't think so. what is he making? irrational political decision not based on the
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fact that scientists came and brought to him information but his own personal reaction. how dare him condemn kathleen sebelius for making a decision that is not at all different. >> alisyn: she didn't want it to be over the counter. >> exactly. >> alisyn: his argument is that it will prevent unintended, unwanted teenage pregnancies. >> there is a better way to do that it's called raising kids to understand that they are not ready for a pregnancy when they are 11 or 12 years old. >> alisyn: ideal. teenagers are getting pregnant. >> they need to talk to their parents. they need to talk to their doctor. they don't need to just go to a drugstore and in the same way they would buy a tootsy roll oh i would like a tootsy roll. i would like people magazine and give me some of that medicine there that will, you know, make sure that i don't get pregnant from all my sexual activity. >> clayton: extreme measure to take this kind of pill the notion it would become some sort of birth control you would take every week or every month unwanted
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pregnancy sets up dangerous precedent for young girls. >> we haven't discussed the potential abuse. a girl buys it. how often does she take this pill? what if she thinks well if i take one, maybe it will prevent but if i take three i'm sure i won't get pregnant. you know, you have a lot of potential danger here and it just seems ridiculously out of form that we would not trust a kid with a 20-ounce soda but would we would trust them with heavy duty pharmaceutical. >> tucker: last thing you want to do is fray the already frayed bonds between a teenager and her parents. governor huckabee sticking around for, this the associated press changing the rules about language. dumping the term illegal immigrant and now altering the definition of islamist. we will tell you why. >> and don't drink and walk. rick reichmuth. you will be fined in the future. where drunk walking may soon be banned. [ male announcer ] it's simple physics...
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[siren] >> alisyn: is the associated press news agency trying to be more p.c. days after they stopped using the term illegal immigrant in the country. they are revising the definition of the word islamist. >> tucker: a.p. style book instructions say do not use the word islammist as synonym for fighters, militants extremists or radicals. >> clayton: if we can't use these terms what can we use? >> nothing that will satisfy the a.p. i can remember when the associated press was
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incredibly respectable and highly rated news organization that was very strict about staying objective and they were really the -- i guess the standard bearer in their style book for how to write news copy. and i remember back in 2008 doing a meeting with the editorial board of the a. p r during presidential campaign and i realized then, this is not the old a.p. you know, and now we are seeing these results, things like islamists and can't use the term illegal immigrant because they don't want to offend anyone. news is not supposed to be offensive or unoffensive. news is supposed to be an accurate portrayal of what is and the associated press has done gone beyond a news organization and now editorializing by picking words that are less offensive to the left. >> tucker: here is the standard. i'm an editor and here is the standard i use clarity. the crispest clearest definition of something is almost always the right one. illegal immigrant strikes me as meeting that standard. it's entirely clear.
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legal immigrants here illegally. illegal immigrants here illegally. no grounds other than the political grounds to ban it. >> even the white house used that term. janet napolitano used the term illegal immigrant. >> tucker: she defended it good for her. >> how you cannot defend what you said clarity but it's also just not clarity. it's truth. i think it's a matter of accuracy. accuracy and clarity ought to be the defining standard. >> clayton: defining the behavior of being illegal. doing something illegal therefore you are illegal immigrant. the motion that you are trying not to offend people seems absurd and then when you go to the root of the islamist definition, changing that so that you are not lumping all of these people together, therefore, you are labeling some terrorists, some not, who just follow the koran. they are being lumped together is what the associated of press says. so to me two different things. illegal immigrant is clear there is a lot of clarity there the other one is not so much. >> not as much.
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i like the term if you are going to talk to about people terrorist or jihaddist use jihadist fascist. that drives them nuts. not everybody who is a muslim is is a jihadist. not everybody who is a muslim, you know,'s to blow somebody up. it's important to make the distinction. >> alisyn: of course. obviously. i think that islamist was confusing. if clarity is our goal, i never really knew what islamist meant anyway. why not just say islamic terrorist. >> i think that's a great way. that brings the clarity that tucker was talking about. >> tucker: there is no way that i can promise that you any a.p. writer is going to use islamic terrorist. >> no they won't use terrorist. we have a bigger problem. the a.p. is reflecting that problem rather than creating it you have to at least say that much. >> clayton: who is on your big show tonight at 8:00 p.m. on the fox news channel. >> larry gatlin will be there we have a lot of fun with larry. world debut of a brand new song that he is going to be
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doing. and we also have, i think, a fascinating panel of people we'll be talking about some of the very issues we have been discussing here today. >> alisyn: dress rehearsal. >> yes, indeed. >> alisyn: you are welcome. >> tucker: you are good in the morning for someone -- i don't know what time do you get up? >> usually about 2:00. no. [ laughter ] a few minutes past that. >> carl: governor huckabee have a great weekend. have a great show. >> appreciate it. >> alisyn: kid brings home bad grades you lose your welfare benefits. does that sound like a good idea. student performance could play a fact for in entitlements. >> tucker: meet these kid geniuses in our studio create a robot right here and you are going to meet them. we have been playing with it all morning. ♪
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>> tucker: quick headlines for you. canfield pushing a bill that would make a family's welfare assistance based on its child's grades. if folks don't maintain satisfactory progress in school a family's assistance could be slashed by up to 30%. this bill has already passed committees in both the state house and the senate in tennessee. well, drink and walk and pay the price literally. one town in alaska is looking to ban walking while intoxicated. it hopes it will decrease more serious public offenses under the proposal, drunk walkers would be hit with up to a $200 fine. wow. >> thanks, tucker. many kids play with legos but our next guest used the toys to build rebots and part of the first lego league. an organization designed to
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get kids excited about science and technology. my kind of people. joining us now are the determine natures. that's their name. grace, maddy, will, brayden, jack, quinton and joseph. did i get them all right? >> um-huh, yes. >> clayton: they are also the state champions from georgia. they will be heading to the world championships later this month. nice to see you guys. welcome, good morning. >> thank you. >> did we get you guys some coffee this morning. >> no. >> you don't need it. start down here. tell me about this competition. i'm down here with grace, maddy and will henry. what is the championship and competition? what did you guys have to do? >> um, well, we kind of -- there are three parts in the championship and there is the core values, the project, and then there is a robot. but the core values is the part you want to get the most on because it's all about team work and team spirit and things like that. and then the second part is the presentation of project. that's what you are going to learn about later. our invention and then the
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third part is the robot which jackson will be telling you about. >> clayton: awesome. were you grays surprised at your victory or you knew? >> we were shocked. >> clayton: you were shocked? >> we had no clue that that was going to happen. it was so surprising. >> clayton: the core values. tell me about the core values part of. this core values is team work. and you have to show helping other teams while you are in competition. you are not up against them you are helping out going through the whole process? >> yeah. >> awesome. so one of the things you are going to learn about is this robot that you guys built. jackson is here. you are the robotics expert. show he how it works and runs and tell me about this robot that you guys build. >> the robot. the first partnered with lego and we used the lego mind storm product to program this and we can let it do pretty much anything. it can run. we have several different
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challenges on the board. >> built this thing from the ground up. you have the lego mind storm. i know what that thing is you have to program the whole thing together to make sure that it runs through your program. >> yes. >> so it lifts. i see like some trees there. >> yes. it has to move a garden patch to the garden space on the board. and if it doesn't, you don't get points for that. >> okay. i see some conferring over here amongst your teammates here. what's going on? are you having technical issues? >> no. >> we never have any technical problems in live television at all. this would be a first on "fox & friends." what are you trying to do? >> making the robot run. >> clayton: this is incredible. i was playing in a dirt pile in my backyard at your age, jackson. and now it's putting the garden down and lifting up. that's incredible. did you win based on this or the whole thing combined not only the robot but the core values and invention.
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>> all of it combined. we had to work together as a team and help other teams while getting a decent score on the robot and with the judges in the presentation. >> clayton: which brings us to our final thing that you guys invented which is pretty incredible. go down here to brayden helping seniors. this is one of the projects that you guys decided to do to help seniors out as part of this project. tell me about this brayden. >> this here is inflatable. it is a product that helps seniors up and out of their chairs with ease. >> how did you come up with this. >> we came up with this by asking seniors and they all decided -- they all told us that they had trouble getting up and out of their chair. so we brain stormed together and came one this. >> clayton: can i try it out? >> yes, can you. >> clayton: the idea is that i sit in this chair and you are going -- am i doing this right? i don't want to throw you off. >> yes.
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>> clayton: i could use this on a beg basis. i know alisyn was eyeing that up. >> clayton: do you want this for the couch over there? >> alisyn: yes, please. >> clayton: is this something that will come to market that you can sell. >> we are planning to getting it in the market. bright star sling shop a company that helps you design it and get your product out in the market. >> clayton: you guys are amazing. the determine nature. they are the georgia state champions, you guys are going to the world championships at the end of april in st. louis. are you guys cycled? are you guys excited? >> yeah. >> clayton: you going to pull it off. >> yes. >> clayton: when you win come back and we will celebrate on the show. fantastic. thanks, guys. congratulations. coming up here on the show you may have more friends looking at your facebook page. the irs now spying on and trying to catch those tax cheats. did you say you didn't make the money and then you bought a boat? they will find you on facebook. perfect your golf game this morning with spring america's number one golf coach here to give us a crash course.
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tucker needs all the help he can get. there this is brutal. [ laughter ] we're all set to bundle your home and auto insurance together. i'll just press this, and you'll save on both. [bell dings] ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, llllet's get ready
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>> clayton: shot of the morning wedding with pure imagination. check out this british couple. willy wonka and chocolate themed wedding. entertain guest. they hired um pa lumpa to come. >> the bride's bouquet made of lollipops and flowers and the groom had a candy filled cane. invitation chocolate bars with golden tickets inside. >> tucker: i like roll that's taking it the to next level. >> clayton: seinfeld had to hire a moil. where do you hire a umpa lumpa? >> clayton: i think. >> alisyn: i think we have had them on the show: look at headlines. fox news alert. nearly two dozen people are dead and dozens of others are injured suicide bombing political rally in iraq. police say the bomber detonated the devices as a sunni candidate was hosting a lunch supporter no, sir
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immediate claim of responsibility for the attack. violence is expected to surge in rawg be iraq ahead of the elections on april 20th. and rutgers could lose major money in the wake of the mike rice basketball video scandal. some the school's major donors reportedly threatening to stop giving money. threats in light of the resignation of the athletic director temper netty. in a letter to the school per mete says he wishes he overruled school officials in december and fired rice instead of suspending him when he saw the video of rice abusing players. still have time to file your tax return but the irs may be digging deeper this year to catch cheaters. the agency will now be looking at your facebook at twitter accounts to gather information on you. the government claims it will only access your page if there is a red flag on your tax form. well, the floor is down. the teams are set and the final four is just hours away from ticking off in the early game. the number one seed, louisville cardinals square
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off against the nine seeded shockers of wichita state. then it's the battle of four seeds. michigan and syracuse go head to head. the winners meet monday in the tournament final. very exciting. those are your evidence lines. let's go outside and see rick. are you going to be watching spores today, rick? >> i don't know, ali. you know what? i got stuck talking to these two lovely ladies visiting from chicago. these two. they were hiding. but welcome from chicago. >> thank you. >> you say it's not that cold here right now. >> not cold, no. >> that's because you from chicago and it's been brutally cold. >> yes. >> welcome. we would like a little warmer air. it will get better and it's going to get better in chicago as well. take a look at the weather maps. we do have a lot more winter to behood. this is where the drought is going on. you see nebraska and south dakota. all that area. that's got the worst drought we have anywhere in the country. get ready because there is know coming and we have had a couple of good snow storms but we needed a lot more. we are going to hit the western side of nebraska
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and south dakota pretty big one. monday into wednesday. that same storm system is going to cause a lot of severe weather in across parts of the plains monday through wednesday as well. we will continue to talk about that meanwhile today, if you liked yesterday in the northeast today is going to be a little bit cooler. still see plenty of sunshine tomorrow we warm back up and everybody gets -- we will see a lot of 60's. a lot of 70s next few days into the northeast. today a cooler one. down to the southeast looking good. pretty dry for the most part and temps looking very, very comfortabled into the northern plains we have some snow across areas of michigan wisconsin and minnesota that will develop again later this afternoon. and then out across the west. we have got that rain and snow into the pacific northwest. that's the big weather maker for this coming week. you golfing now? golfing right now weather is getting warmer which means it's time to hit the links. >> if you need help getting back into the swing of things, the golf channel's michael breed is is here to
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help. this is not the way you hold it. >> clayton: not like a baseball bat. >> alisyn: michael, you have your work cut out for you this morning. >> i don't know if i can get up this early to help that out. that's a lot of pressure. >> clayton: if people need help get golf ready.com. what is the web site. get golf ready.com. >> basically there is 27,000 pga officials men and women helping people play better golf. and really the people said too expensive to play. what we have get golf ready is you can get five levies for under $100. $99. right up your alley. get up on the golf course five lessons start playing the game and learn how to play the game and have a little fun. >> hold the club properly you know that. >> alisyn: i don't know how to hold it. >> that's what i'm here for. make sure that you are. [ laughter ] >> you are left handed so you are going to make your right hand on top of the left just like that. you are going to go that way. then you want to cover up
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that thumb. and get it in your fingers almost like you are holding a hammer. you wouldn't hold a hammer in the palm of your hand you would hold it in the fingers. >> >> we have got options. you prefer the linking. some people go link some people don't. >> i don't link but tiger and jack link. it's hard to say the best in the world. those guys are linking, linking is not bad. >> alisyn: i know as posture you are supposed to stick your butt out. >> tucker: i'm glad you said that. >> be proud of that push your back out and keep it flat. >> clayton: a lot of people round off. >> you you don't want to do anything that you look bad at, right? if you are rounding up and you there you go you are looking great. >> clayton: what about the knees? >> little knee flex like any sport. >> tucker: shift your cuff as little bit. playing in coat and tie shoot your cuffs a little bit. >> this is too much knee flex.
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that's too much. you just want to bend them a little bit. >> clayton: okay. >> what you want to do and this is where we have to spread out a little bit. when we start moving the club. this is great. you are really attentive. >> tucke move the club you want your weight to move in the club that the direction is going. when it goes this way you want to go that way. >> alisyn: i'm going to step back away from my colleagues who i am about to knock in the head. >> clayton: do you want me to go over here. >> go over there. >> i'm going to hit godzilla? >> it's golf zilla actually. >> really cute. when you get away make sure that -- >> alisyn: is clayton far enough away from me. >> he is not going to hit you i promise. >> so now,. >> this is nice job. yes. >> go like this? >> yes. >> that's really good and you are in heels by the way so this is really good. yes. oh.
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>> you are a miracle. >> you are a good sport. >> you are a good coach. >> i like this. >> when you put that on just put this like this. i got it then you go like that. nice. nice work out of you. >> alisyn: where is that coming from? >> this is too good. >> tucker: i love this job. don't you? >> clayton: watch alisyn. >> alisyn: just broke a window. >> clayton: i'm going to hit o'reilly's office. can i hit o'reilly's office up there? >> alisyn: try it. this is what we are going to do for the rest of the show. >> bring it out here. >> alisyn: that's excellent. get golf ready.com. >> golf zilla is going down. >> alisyn: what's coming up. >> tucker: the fight on the front lines to defend our freedom is taking place among veterans. why wouldn't they come home? are they being forced to fight for their benefits.
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who says this is becoming the norm unfortunately. >> alisyn: some the deadliest secrets in the world man size fresh water fish known to kill. that does not stop him from getting into the water with them. star of river monsters is here live with us. ♪ what do you think will come of that?
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>> alisyn: welcome back, everybody. here are now some stories for your health. a major medical break through for cancer patients. scientists have developed a new radiation therapy with no debilitating side effects. that means no hair loss or nausea. so far the treatment has only been tested on mice but researchers are hoping
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to do a trial ton humans soon. and trust your gut for a good marriage. happier with the more on average. both males and feel mails gained about a pound a year and those who were unhappy lost weight and more likely to divorce. for more information on these stories visit foxnews.com slash weekend. >> tucker: thanks ali, you confirmed all my suspicions. american veterans put their lives on the line every day to protect their freedoms. yet, they are being forced it to wait for unacceptable and really remarkable amount of time to collect their benefits. according to the center for investigative reporting, hundreds of thousands of veterans are waiting an average of 279 days for those benefits. some of them are suffering from life threatening illnesses. with us now is attorney and retired u.s. navy commander john wells. thanks for coming on. >> tucker, my pleasure. >> will you put this in some context for us in that
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seems like an awful long time to wait for a veteran to receive his benefits. is it longer than it used to be? >> it certainly is it used to be six months when i first applied in 94 it used to be six months. part of the problem is the processing time it used to be in the late 1990s you would have a v.a. claims worker processing 185 claims a year which was low but that was their average. today the average is 79 claims. i'm going to tell that you 79 figure is way low. i know of nobody with any kind of extensive or complicated claim that's got anything in less than year. to make matters worse, that's the tip of the iceberg. when you have the claim initially denied at the regional office, and you have to go through the appellate process, you are adding years. it's 18 months minimum to get to the board of veterans appeals which is the interimmediate appellate authority. to go to the veterans claims is even longer. i have got one case that's been ongoing for 10 years to try to get this one person the benefits.
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it's unbelievable. >> tucker: shocking, considering there is no group in america that has more and more widespread support than veterans. everybody supports veterans. everyone acknowledges our debt to veterans. and, yet, you say that much of this process is not even digitized. it's done by letter? can that be true in 2013. >> we're talking about stubby pencil, paper files being sent back and forth. so, for example, if a file is being worked on at the board of veterans appeals and you have another claim at the regional office, that second claim can't be heard because the files at the board of veteran appeals. nothing is digitalized. nothing is done by email. all by hard copy letter. it's the most inefficient system that you can think of. now, i will get the v.a. credit for one thing. they kill trees. they will send out packets of paper, 10, 12 pages in length with a lot of legalese. but in the end they are not solving the problem. they are more concerned with making sure the box on the form is checked
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correctly than getting the individual claim processed. >> tucker: this is really stunning. do you have any evidence that the obama administration is moving to fix this? >> they claim they're. the secretary has set a goal of 125 days with a 98% accuracy by 2015. i don't see how they are going to get there the way they are going. they need to make their computer systems compatible with the department of defense. now, there has been a study to do that with the medical records. i think that if they spend about a billion dollars on it and they have just said no, gee, this is too hard, we're not going to do it. they need to get seemless transition. they need to be able to send things back and forth by email. but the biggest problem they have to get is to get the appellate problems in library. 50% of the claims coming out of the board of veterans appeals. going to the court of appeals for veterans claims are sent back or remanded by the court. because the case was not properly prepared. >> tucker: that's just
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unbelievable. the idea. >> inexcusable. >>ed the idea that a soldier has spent 2, 3, 5 tours waits almost a year to have thinks claim addressside really appalling. thanks, ghearnd wells. i really appreciate it. >> thank you, sir. >> tucker: coming up. one of our own reporters facing time in jail for not revealing her sources. doing her job. the first amendment right can't. doesn't top our next guest from getting up close and personal with him. river monsters host, jeremy wade really one of my personal heros here next. ♪ using supercomputing and mobile technology over our secure network, verizon innovators are building a world of medical treatment data in the cloud.
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>> alisyn: some of the deadliest creatures in the world. that doesn't stop our next guest from getting close to them. >> it may not be the biggest monster in the river this small ray is the biggest fish in south america. >> gloves protect me. >> this is a creature dangerous to people. if you stepped on it and stuck in your leg it's very painful. if you don't treat the wound that can become septic. >> jeremy weighed is the the-wade is the host river monsters. you are not just a host. you are knee deep. how did you first come to this show? how did you come to this way of life of going after these strange creatures. >> it goes back a long way. i have been fishing since i was 7 or years old. i was traveling on my own for 25 years before the show started. serves doing the research. although i didn't really at the time know where it was leading.
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i was traveling and finding strange creatures. the thing about fresh water rather than the sea. discovery. >> tucker: you fished everywhere. chernobyl, loch ness. if you are an average person and you don't have thatch money to spend but you are interested in thrilling sport fishing. what would you recommend. >> tropical rain forest. if you get your airfare to somewhere like brazil, middle of the amazon, you sort of almost leave the cash economy. if you have got time, you don't necessarily need much money, but if you have got time, i would go for maybe sort of three months at a time. >> peacock bass or what are you fishing for. >> peacock bass. i was after something that is said to be the largest fresh water fish in the world. >> tucker: how big is it. >> encyclopedia britannica used to say 15 feet. it's probably closer to 10. it's going to weigh 500 pounds. >> alisyn: meanwhile, you encounter very ferocious,
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terrifying things. in fact, you were recently on the hunt of something that killed a guy in a very gory gruesome fashion. tell us about bolivia. >> that's right. that is our season premier. and this was a young guy who jumped in a river, got into difficulties. disappeared. and when they retrieved his body, he had actually had his face eaten. and this is right next to a village on the river. you know, just the thought of something down there that is capable of doing that and what we did was investigate, you know, what was it but also what were precisely the circumstances that led to that. >> did you find it? what did it. >> we did find it i can't really say in advance what it was. it was like a fly. possibly -- i will stop there. barbie dolls, whatever. >> i have to ask you, jeremy because river monsters the season premier is sunday on animal planet
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at 9:00 p.m. the season finale, i don't want to give it away you are going to loch ness. are you looking for the loch ness monster and two season hour finale do you find it or signs of it. >> we do have a dramatic refltion at the end of -- revelation at the end of the program. i can't say much more than that very epic journey leading up to that point. >> tucker: you have the greatest job. if you ever retire call me first and i will put my name in. i think you have the greatest job that's ever been. >> clayton: are you up to it tucker? >> tucker: probably not i would try it? >> edited highlights. fishing long long periods of nothing happening. very very boring in realtime. >> tucker: till worth it. >> alisyn: the show is "river monsters" we will be watching animal planet for big career. >> tucker: thanks, jeremy. kids go school day hungry. didn't have enough money in their account. the people who refused to feed them. >> clayton: looks like you
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>> good morning, everyone, it's saturday, april 6th. i'm he alisyn camerota. welcome to 1979. why the latest jobs report for the united states set the work force back more than 30 years. we'll show you the disturbing number. >> tucker: she may be only 15 years old, but may be one of the most articulate gun control. >> by signing this, you're liberating american citizens over our constitutional rights. >> tucker: you'll hear from the young teenager whose comments exploded over the internet. >> clayton: the cost of being beautiful, it won't just hit your pocket book, but shorten
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your life span. how long it takes to get this beautiful. "fox & friends" on hour four. >> it's time to get up with "fox & friends"! >> that's natural. >> alisyn: i'm not sure. four out of five doctors don't recommend this. and welcome in everybody, great to be with tucker carlson and clayton morris. this morning, we have so much just to tell you about. >> clayton: in fact, getting your-- headlines right now. >> alisyn: and nelson mandela has just been released from a south african hospital for a pneumonia infection. it was his third hospital still since november and it dates back to his 27 years in prison he was diagnosed with early stage tuberculosis. and he has suffered from
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prostate cancer and stomach ailments, but this morning seems to be doing well. meanwhile, a white supremacist gang member will make a first court appearance, james lohr was arrested after a chase with police. they believe that he was in contact with evan ebel days before the murder of tomorrow clements. they think he killed ebel before he shot clements and fled to texas. david petraeus, reportedly interviewed him in arlington, virginia, as far as the ongoing investigation into his extramarital affair. the fbi would not confirm to fox news, only that there was activity in virginia. petraeus resigned after his affair aft affair with paula broadwell.
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and high honors for a troop that saved a fellow. he was awarded the silver star. while in afghanistan he his unit was bomb, he suffered a traumatic brain injury and still helped others. he reenlisted to serve as an officer helping other wounded soldiers. those are your headlines. >> let's check with rick reichmuth to see if it's going to be spring or we're getting another foot of snow. >> there is going to be snow across the plains, but for us, it's a shock, hard to imagine, but today's highs look at this, into the 50's for most everyone, even towards d.c., just 58. go to tomorrow, and we start to see the warmer air get in here, washington, you get up to 70 degrees, and go into the day on monday, we'll inch up a few more degrees and by tuesday, probably the warmest of the week. we'll see a lot of places into
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the 70's and 80's, creeping in. a lot of the trees so late blossoming and budding out, an explosion at one time and an allergy issue by the time we get to the latter part of next week. we're clear across parts of the east and a disturbance across the central plains and more snow throughout the northern plains and a little bit of scattered showers across the area and keeping the cloud cover with it as well. across the west there's a new storm that's moving off shore and this is going to be a major storm for a lot of us, over this coming week. by the time we get towards monday, we get to see snow falling, significant, well over a foot of snow for places across areas of nebraska and south dakota, but severe weather across kansas and oklahoma. this into tuesday and into wednesday, potential for a severe weather outbreak with tornado weather with it. the worst we've seen so far this spring. back to you. >> clayton: thanks, rick. president obama angering folks on the left and right as we're starting to get some sense of
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what his budget proposal will look like this week. we have a house budget and a the senate budget and we've been waiting for the obama budget coming out this week. and it looks like major cuts to medicare and medicaid and some entitlements, the left is outraged and the right is outraged because they're going to pay for it with increased spending. >> tucker: we're not sure that there will be major cuts. we know that the president's putting proposes a slowdown in the rate of growth of social security benefits. i don't know what the so-called medicaid cuts are, the taxes are coming from the same old places, taxed raised for rich people and cigarette smokers, disproportionately poor and uneducated. >> alisyn: and a look at the economy. a shot where we are now. with the bad job numbers that came out, there is an incredible shrinking labor pool right now.
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in the past month, the civilian labor force has dropped by almost half a million workers. it's now at 63% of the eligible workers in the country who want to be employed are working that's down .2% and by the way, this is the lowest level since may of 1979. >> so, who is most affected by this and the continuing shrinking economy? adult men. 6.9%. adult women 7%, whites, hispanics, under 10%, you get to blacks, 13% and teenagers and one of the things that came out of the jobs report, charles payne hit on, the idea that part-time workers, probably teen workers, home from college, can't find it or are not going to get the part-time work anymore and all of these part-time workers hit more in the jobs numbers, it's easier for them to basically sit back, get money from mom
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and dad, presumably than it is to actually find work. >> think about what it means. this, the labor force i think everyone can agree the number to watch. because it's not a cooked number, it's not affected by federal record keeping, which, as we know what percentage of the population can work are working. it's the lowest in over 30 years, that means the ever shrinking pool of people is paying for the benefits of an ever expanded proportion of the population, that's not a formula that we can sustain, period. >> clayton: and the obama administration says we need to spend more, the problem is the reason we're seeing the slowing in the economy we haven't spent enough. we need more spending. >> alisyn: and chief of the president's job says it's sequester, but bear in mind march is the first time that you're seeing this, the repercussions of the sequester. the first numbers taken, since the sequester hit. now, other economists said that's not true and the dismal anemic numbers have nothing to
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do with the sequester and in fact we won't see those for months from now and the good indices of that, is the government worker unemployment number because the sequester hits government jobs. >> tucker: 3.6 and the rate for the rest of us 7.6, four points higher. it's striking to me how there's a uniform message from all elements of the administration, including people whose job is not political, but policy related. secretary of education, for example, arne duncan, the head of the president's job council, it's distressing to see the level of spin from people who should be more serious, out with dumb talking points no person believes. that's too political. >> clayton: we've heard politics being behind a lot of the gun control legislation that's come forward and some arguing, many legislators, in fact, in connecticut angry that it was pushed through quickly there. and without any time to read a
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150 page bill. sarah is a 15-year-old, talking about the legislation affecting folks like her out doing sport gone-- >> shooting. >> i wanted to say gun hunting. she had a chance to talk on "fox & friends" and saying these are taking the rights away from people like her. listen. >> ever since i first learned how to shoot the issue with gun violence around the nation became clear, guns are not the problem, people are. by signing this legislation you're instead liberating american citizens of ur constitutional rights. not eliminating guns for society, but the ability to protect our life, liberty and pursuit of happiness. >> everybody upset about this. it takes away our sense of security or defense against attackers we may have and won't let me shoot anymore. i hope that listeners are listening and hearing this and realize this gun control legislation isn't going to get us anywhere and that maybe
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they can stop it. >> alisyn: she's 15 years old, but long been a gun unthewes after the and another unintended consequence, she says, it will affect her future, the gun control laws. she was eligible or will be eligible for many scholarships from prestigious universities that have shooting clubs and she says if the gun control they've talked about goes into effect that she won't be able to practice and be eligible anymore for that. >> tucker: it is going into effect where she, unfortunately for her lives. it's hard to look at pictures of sarah, merkel, and merkel is one of the great shotgun companies, i don't know if she's related, but it's insane to make it harder for people like that, the vast majority of gun owners law abiding people, making it harder for their second amendment rights, it's nothing to do with
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safety, it's social control. >> clayton: perhaps she should be be out there doing the talking. >> tucker: i totally agree with that. >> clayton: because i feel like there's not been enough of that type of articulate discussion about gun rights from someone who is out there who is articulating her needs to, you know, use a gun personally, scholarships, what she's doing-- >> that's what we're hoping the talks is that vice-president biden was having, if he was haring frearim people on all sides of the issue, and when he was having the discussions hopefully there were gunnthe enthusiasts. >> and most of the mass shootings have been committed by crazy people, what do you do to keep guns out of the hands of crazy people? that's the question.
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instead we're trying to prevent sarah merkel from having a gun. it's insane. >> alisyn: feel free to share your thoughts with us, we will talk about it after the show he show. and have you heard about this, a fox news report refuse to go reveal her sources about the colorado theater shooter. why she may have to go to jail. >> clayton: and the cost of being beautiful, alisyn, it will shorten your life. >> alisyn: worth it. (laughter) >> how much time you spend primping. ♪ more than two years ago, the people of bp made a commitment to the gulf. and every day since, we've worked hard to keep it.
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today, the beaches and gulf are open for everyone to enjoy. we've shared what we've learned, so we can all produce energy more safely. bp's also committed to america. we support nearly two-hundred-fifty thousand jobs and invest more here than anywhere else. we're working to fuel america for generations to come. our commitment has never been stronger.
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>> the movie massacre in colorado lands one of our own reporters in court. jana winter is a reporter with foxnews.com and during the the fallout in aurora has year, she broke the story of the notebook kept by alleged shooter james holmes, and she's facing possible jail time unless she reveals the source behind the story. >> clayton: joining the program of law and journalism at new york's law school, michelle, nice to see you this morning. >> thank you for having me. >> clayton: at the heart of all of this she reported following this event, that james holmes had sent this notebook to his psychiatrist. she then learned about it and now she's under pressure by this judge to reveal that source who gave her that information, that was supposed to be under seal. she was doing her job, what problems as a journalist.
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>> she was going her job and doing it well and she broke a story and she's done nothing wrong and she's facing possible fine and jail sentence. >> alisyn: what's confusing, colorado has a shield law and it's supposed to protect the journalist from having to disclose their sources, so how can she be having to go to trial for this? >> colorado's shield law is not as potent as other shield laws. every state has its own shield law. journalists would like for there to be a federal shield law to cover all the states. opponents of a federal shield law would say, we don't know who journalists really are. anyone could say i'm blogging, i'm a journalist or a national security issue. but this woman, jana winter, is a journal and there is no question about national security. >> clayton: why is it an issue. >> it doesn't be. >> clayton: she's an excellent journalist here at fox and a tireless reporter. i know her, i know the work she does, she doesn't sleep
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she does such a great job. she's a journalist, works for fox news and she gets in source, how much jail time could she be facing if she doesn't reveal her source? >> i'm the not going to-- the judge has discretion and he could even decide perhaps there's jail time. but we don't have to go into that yet and let her appeal na. from a journalism standpoint i have a question do other networks don't think she's not going to jail and why they're not covering it or because it's a fox news reporter that other networks aren't covering it so much? because in preparing for today's appearance, i went online and i have to tell you that fox news is seemingly the only network covering this major story in a real way. >> alisyn: that's a shame. >> it is. >> alisyn: thank you for bringing it to our attention and hopefully now that we're talking about it other people will pick up on it. michelle, thank you for your expertise from new york law school. >> clayton: thanks, michelle. coming up on the show, no credit, no problem, the obama
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administration wants banks to loosen up on home loan qualifications for it's easier for people without credit to get. isn't that risky business? didn't we go down this road before? >> did you ever have a dream you were falling? your mind may be telling you something? the director is here to decode our dreams. >> clayton: i didn't wait.
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>> and welcome back, we're back with a fox news alert. we're just learning three n.a.t.o. troops have been killed in a blast in afghanistan. the explosion came from a roadside bomb. it's unclear if any were americans. and two civilians helping coalition forces were also killed. we'll follow that story for you and bring you more when it becomes available.
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tucker? >> risky lending led to our nation's housing crisis. the obama administration is pushing banks to do it all over again, believe it or not. the administration is pushing banks to loan money to people who have weak credit because they say the housing rebound is leaving young buyers and those who don't pay their bills behind. what does it mean for you, the taxpayers, and is it a good idea? that's a rhetorical question. and a look at expert kendra todd, am i missing something? it seems like, a, it should be front page news in every paper in the country every day. and two, it's unsainsane. didn't we have a recession? >> and it's a shame he we don't know how something like this would play out? wait, does anybody remember 1999 when the clinton administration decided to loosen credit requirements
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with fannie mae and open the flood gates for low income borrowers into the markets, by the way, one of the key contributing factors to the housing crisis in the first place. you know, albert einstein defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. this is just madness, this rhetoric. i mean, the timing is just crazy. i mean, think about the fact that the labor force is at a 30-year low. the economy is anemic and now it's is a good idea to allow people with weak credit back into the housing market? >> it does raise a series of interesting questions, beginning with, we have some sense of why the recession of 2008 began in the first place, the collapse of the subprime credit market. what has this administration done to make that sector safer for the rest of us, anything? >> you know, that's a really good question and i don't have anything that i can think of that they've actually done. now, i will say that they have
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brilliantly wrapped this around the concept that they really want lenders to start allowing people with credit scores in the 620 to 680 range back into the market. right now an fha loan is-- the credit scores averaging around 700, which is typically much higher than what an fha loan targets for borrowers. but i think that lenders should be conservative. i mean, look what they just went through and just the fact that the obama administration would put up taxpayer dollars and say, listen, lender, it's okay for you to do these risky loans because the taxpayers will back you up. i mean, right back into a tailspin and we'll lose any ground we've got with housing. >> there you go. and your last point we need to reemphasize, taxpayers are on the hook for this. taxpayers back fannie mae and freddie mac.
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these are not private they're for what we're liable and making sure we're not crazy like this one. thanks for joining us. well, coming up, tensions rising in north korea. new video of leader kim jong-un playing the tough guy, waving a handgun around and he apparently doesn't understand. how should the u.s. respond to this and other bellicose signals from that nation. a live report from washington ahead. men it looks like you're permanently in the dog house. she likes him more than you, in fact a lot more. and got the details on that coming up.
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>> and mike wright. despite there's video of him, attacking at basketball, he's still being given a $100,000 bonus, and you have a losing program and a $100,000 bonus. you know where he could end up? running a banking system. >> alisyn: if only that weren't true? ladies, you have spoken, you don't like the time to beautify. you know what annoys you the most, shaving your legs, you
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can't stand it. >> clayton: well then stop. >> alisyn: well, that's what i recommend. and four minutes a day, six times a week, you can cut back on that. to begin with. >> clayton: it's remarkable, a study out showing just how many days of your life are being sacrificed as a result of primping in the morning, to the tune of 578 days total of your life gone because of the amount of time that you spend primping. at the top of that list, styling your hair, but that never stops, you're filing it throughout the afternoon jo a whole month of plucking eyebrows sacrificed on the altar. as a licensed socialists, none of this is done for the benefit of men, they're ancillary beneficiary, all of this is to impress women. >> alisyn: and you admitted last hour, you're a fan of sacrificing-- >> i like your beauty. not in a creepy way, but the god's gifts, flowers, trees, sunsets, babies, women.
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>> clayton: pedicures, 11 days. i don't know that men notice pedicures, you're doing that so other women notice your toes of course, right? so 11 days of your life. >> alisyn: i think i'm doing it to sit down and get my feet rubbed. >> clayton: 20 days for exfoliation? 20 days of exfoliating. >> alisyn: that's important, but 44 days of mosturizing. >> clayton: right, i can see that. >> tucker: 12 days to apply fake tan, 12 days of fake tanning, it should be a song. >> alisyn: i think it's longer than that. i've spent a lot more than 12 days. >> clayton: fake tanning. >> alisyn: it's time consuming. it's a spray and dummy a gummy - >> do you have a temporary tattoo? >> a little body ink. >> clayton: and let us know friends@foxnews.com. >> tucker: and another day, another threat. now that they're warning
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embassies in pyongyang because their safety cannot be guaranteed in the ominous words of the korean government. that's video of kim jong-un with surfaces, molly. >> reporter: bless you for tossing to me with the this topic and not beautifying time. >> alisyn: we'll get to that. >> reporter: north korea is trying to scare foreign diplomates out of the country and so far it isn't working. north korea says it can only assure safety until next wednesday because of increasing tensions. britain says it's staying put and russia studying the request and the u.s. which does not have diplomatic relations with north korea, dprk as it's called, works through the swedes, they say they're going to be there as well. we've been in touch with the
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swedes, our power in the dprk. because obviously if they were to change their status, we would have to injury american citizens at the dprk. at this reason we have no reason to believe they will make any changes. >> reporter: but today, about 100 south koreans who work across the border at an industrial park that's the last shared link between north and south korea, left their jobs. north korea has blocked south korea from getting food and supplies to the industrial park. now some workers are starting to come back home to the south. meanwhile, north korean state-run television released new video of its leader kim jong-un inspecting north korean troops and equipment and firing a gun. south korean media reports that the north has moved two missiles into position on its east coast, possibly indicating a test or some kind of launch. the white house said yesterday that wouldn't be out of character for the north. >> and we would not be surprised to see them take
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such an action. we have seen them launch missiles in the past and the united nations security council has repeatedly condemned them. . >> reporter: north korea has been taking provocative actions recently, experts say, because of a new round of united nations sanctions in the wake of the most recent nuclear tests and because of joint u.s., south korean military exercises that started last month. back to you guys in new york. >> alisyn: all right. molly. what's your least favorite beautifying practice? >> reporter: i'm tired thinking of those hours spent, that's exhausting. >> clayton: exfoliating? >> all i can say for alisyn camerota and me, we don't need any of that. this is how we look when we wake up in the morning. >> alisyn: your nose is growing, molly. >> reporter: i know, i know. >> tucker: i believe you, molly. >> reporter: thank you for hair and makeup team, they do great jobs. >> alisyn: so true, molly. so true and molly really does look like that. and i'm not, but molly does
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look like that. thank you. i see you're avoiding any controversy. >> clayton: stepping. wise for men to keep their mouth shut. >> alisyn: now to the headlines, what's happening, an ohio family has been rescued after a terrifying right in the middle of alligator infested water. the family was on vacation and borrowed an air boat to explore the everglades. they got stuck in some roots. >> a wrong turn and this is the first time i've been out here, so, obviously, on this body of water, probably not the thing to do. >> alisyn: well, a massive search was launched for the family with crews scouring more than a thousand acres. the family used whistles and air horns, no one was hurt. and four people denying lunch as a middle school. telling their food accounts were too low and they say no child will ever be denied
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lunch again. and a new survey finds women love their dogs more than men. 75% say it was woof at first sight, but only a fourth felt that way about their boyfriend and husband and to make matters worse the majority of women polled say they have recall of day one with their dog. less than half remember meeting their mates. bow wow. >> clayton: and too bad dogs can't talk. if men wouldn't talk, we'd be on the same playing field. >> tucker: they're furry and nice and wet nose thing. >> alisyn: they're bet all around. >> tucker: if you want to win the affection of your wife, be more like your dog. >> clayton: don't talk. >> rick: and my nose is wet, also, if you want me to rub it on your jacket or something.
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>> clayton: alisyn's dress. >> rick: exactly. south carolina. >> yeah, bentonsville, south carolina, what's your name? >> oh, no, i've been trying for the last five minutes to get your name. that's all right. that's okay, and now he's hiding. that happens sometimes. and take a look at the weather maps, you guys. and colder air, this is tuesday and got to show you on tuesday. people across the east have not had warm weather and across the west it's been very, very warm. we'll see a flip-flop by tuesday and denver, you're going to see a high of 29 and raleigh, a high of 80. so a bit of a flip-flop in the pattern here and that's going to be nice for a lot of people and it's going to come out, and talk about that in a second. across the northeast, a cool day, but dry, plenty of sunshine, lots of sunshine down to the south as well and temps warming up a little bit and kind of a spectacular day and into the northern plains, it's cooler, across that northern tier more snow in minnesota, lower michigan and
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wisconsin. and the snow and rain in the the pacific northwest, that's going to be the weather maker for us the next few days and a big snow by monday, tuesday, wednesday, across the high plains and big severe weather, a potential outbreak across the areas of the southern plains. all right, are you ready to give me your name? >> okay. >> rick: i thought i'd try. >> alisyn: scare little children. >> i know, learning. >> rick: come on. >> clayton: learning as is young man. >> alisyn: and i think i have the answer. >> tucker: if you were to put your husband and your dog in the trunk of your car as a woman and drive around for an hour and open up the trunk, who would you be glad to see you when you did that? just your dog, that may be the key why women like him more. >> alisyn: give it a shot, ladies. >> clayton: have you ever had a dream that you were falling? that happens to me once a week. your mind may be telling you something. the director of sleep medicine here to decode your dreams next, you don't want to miss this.
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>> tucker: we're stepping inside the ring, a peak at wrestle mania 3, wwe stars joining us live. >> clayton: it's wrestle mania 29. >> tucker: i misread the script. >> alisyn: a look with david asman at the cost of freedom business block. >> good morning, you think that march jobs report was weak? wait until you hear what happens if these workers get their ways. and fixes tax scores to get more funds. dozens of teachers have been indicted. time for parents to pick their own schools. and is it time to buy liability insurance or face a hefty fine? and colonel allen west is fuming. and the cost of freedom at the top of the hour. we'll see you then. when i first felt the diabetic nerve pain, of course, i had no idea what it was.
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i felt like my feet were going to sleep. it progressed from there to burning like i was walking on hot coals to like a thousand bees that were just stinging my feet. i have a great relationship with my doctor. he found lyrica for me. [ female announcer ] it's known that diabetes damages nerves. lyrica is fda approved to treat diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is not for everyone. it may cause seris allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell yo doctor right away if you havehese, new or worsening depression, or unusuhanges in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, changes in eye sit including blurry vision, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or skin sores from diabetes. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain, and swelling ofhands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. ose who've had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. having les pain... it's a wonderful feeling. [ female announcer ] ask your doctor about lyrica today.
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it's specific treatment for diabetic nerve pain. to hear more of phyllis's story, visit lyrica.com. we don't let frequent heartburn come between us and what we love. so if you're one of them people who gets heartburn and then treats day afr day... block the acid with prilosec otc and don't get heartburn in the first place! [ male announcer ] e pill eachmorning. 24 hours. zero heartbur
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>> welcome back. are your rekrug dreams leaving you exhausted? your sub conscious could be trying to tell you something. joining us now to decode the mystery of your mind and explain what your dreams can reveal about your overall health is dr. carol ashton at meridian health institute. nice to see you this morning, doc. welcome. this is fascinating. number one on your list i think happens to me once a week, and i get the jimmy leg and falling-- i'm half awake and feel like i'm sleeping and the falling feeling. you say this is a real issue and tied to something specific. >> absolutely can be. when you first fall asleep what could happen you could have the jerk of those muscles and that's what we call mio conic jerking and you can see it in pregnant people or exercising too much. >> clayton: that's not my
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problem. >> but the dream itself, the brain is taking in the old information and new information and processing it in a new pattern to help you come up with new solutions to the problem of the day. dreaming allows you to work through the negative emotions so you can solve them in a safe environment from your bedroom. so, when you're having that falling sensation, it typically is conjuring up emotions of failure or fear. so, that falling sensation is something that if you pay attention to it, you could say, okay, what am i fearing or what am i afraid of that i might not accomplish and work towards solving it yourself. >> clayton: i think i've had a fear of failing my whole life and the stress from falling, makes sense. number two, the out of control vehicle. i've never had that, driving an out of control vehicle that you can't stop. what does it tell you? >> attached to emotions, if you were driving a car and it
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was out of control, and couldn't get it in the direction. something in your life is out of control. >> clayton: overwhelmed. >> taken on too much. in those circumstances, you need to step back and take control. professional or financial life under control. get relationships under control. and unfortunately, what will happen, you're constantly learning about these things and not getting them under control. it actually rewires your brain and programs your brain for worry. so it becomes a vicious circle so you want to intervene. >> clayton: i've heard about people having these dreams about their teeth falling out and i never believed, oh, really? that's a common dream. then i had that dream last with your at one point i remember having that dream and i woke up, that's what they're talking about. what does the teeth falling out dream mean? >> it can mean different things, and teeth what they mean to us, teeth, it's right there on your face, it can mean power, it can mean confidence so if your teeth are falling out you may be
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struggling with an issue with confidence for that particular day. if you're a boxer your teeth falling out might be a good thing. and they're cataloged in your head when you approach emotions and behaviors to the images. >> a common dream being chased. >> what does this tell us? >> for many people being chased is associated with avoidance, you're avoiding something, you're not getting to that work issue that's a problem for you or dealing with that relationship that's a problem. so, stop avoiding what it is in your day, and then hopefully you'll be able to get past that dream. >> all right, not being chased. but i occasionally teeth fall and my common dream i can't get to that college class, can't find it on campus, i know i'm supposed to get there. i have that dream every month, i think. >> well, you know, i have, too. commonly not prepared for an exam. college, you're supposed to be moving ahead, meeting goals
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and emotion there, oh, my gosh, i'm not prepared, i can't find the place i'm supposed to be, i'm going to fail at this. usually it's not feeling prepared. >> clayton: i see a theme with mine, fear, failure and stress. all right, doctor, you diagnosed me. thank you for joining us this morning. if you missed any of these go to foxnews.com and we will have the full segment. thanks. >> my pleasure. >> clayton: never before seen footage of a baby royal. prince charles and wrestlers and two friends, competing in wrestle mania 29. it could be the biggest esgest wrestle mania ever!. using telemedical and mobile technologies, verizon innovators
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are connecting trauma surgeons to patients in the field. helping them get the attention they need, before they even reach the hospital. because the world's biggest challenges deserve even bigger solutions. powerful answers. verizon.
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>> time for quick headlines. there's a new baby bump in hollywood. actress halle berry and fiance oliver martinez. we're told the 46-year-old is three months along and having a boy. check this out. rare home video of prince charles as a baby. the video titled prince charles at home. that's pretty literal. shows queen elizabeth playing with her baby boy in the living room and he ventured outside and celebrating the british film industry. >> did you see the sequel, prince charles outside? laugh well, more than 75,000-- more than 75,000 fans expected to converge on met life stadium in new jersey in anticipation for tomorrow night's wrestle mania 29. if you missed the first 2, this is one of the must-see
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events in the highly anticipated match between dolf ziegler and team hell no. and joining us now are wwe wrestlers. >> wow! >> biggie and aj. >> clayton: nice to see you guys, welcome. am tucker mentioned wrestle mania 3 earlier this morning. >> tucker: now you're mocking me. >> clayton: mentioned it by accident. little did tucker know, wrestle mania 3, the most attended. hulk hogan and wrestle mania 29 could break all records why? >> it's the biggest show of the year. the biggest wrestle mania of the near, so many great wwe superstars, last year, 1.2 million pay-per-views of mess wrestle mania. >> clayton: back in new york. >> absolutely, this is sacred
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ground, wrestling and sports entertainment-wise, madison square garden, a great time and place to be giving back to new york and new jersey, just such great fans in support over the years and it's going to be back here to give them the great show and give nem some prestige back into wrestle mania. >> it's always amazing to bring everyone home. >> tucker: what do your classmates from grade school say your he' doing wrestle mania. >> no surprise, i was 12 and said this is what i'm going to do. >> and you knew at 12 years old. how did you prepare? >> i tried to get bigger than the 90 pounds i was most of my life and you know, it's really hard, but this is my dream come true and it's all of our dreams come true and we're just so lucky and blessed to be back here home for me. >> biggie, how do you prepare for wrestle mania as opposed
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to a typical match. this is the super bowl of wrestling. what do you do, your typical routine. >> for me it's a big day, it's my debut match and the only superstar to have the first televised match at wrestle mania, a big deal for me, it's wrestle mania. what i normally do, eat, workout and-- >> and what do you have for breakfast and what's your shirt size? >> squeeze in an xl. takes five minutes and i need help and usually an xl. >> i don't believe you. >> i don't think the camera are conveying the proportion, you're a big man. >> that's the big. >> tucker: what do you have for breakfast. >> protein shakes and oatmeal. >> clayton: preview the big match tomorrow night. guys, what can we expect. >> first and foremost this team together goes out and steals the show and superstars works so hard every single night to give the fans the wwe universe such a great show and
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we promise the steal the show like he we always do. >> alisyn: there you go. >> clayton: what would you do to me if i tried to steal your briefcase? >> did you sign a waiver? >> go ahead, he signed a waiver, let's see it. >> oh, gosh! >> cat-like reflexes. >> grabbed it and almost fell down. >> did you see that? you need a wimpy guy to hold a briefcase tomorrow night at wrestle mania. >> i look like a tax accountant, don't i. >> wrestle mania, pay-per-view, could be the biggest wrestle mania, and thank you guys so much. >> now you can do that. ♪ how do you measure happiness? by the armful? by the barrelful? e carful? how about...by the bowlful? campbell's soups give you nutrition, energy, and can help you keep a healthy weight. campbell's. it's amazing what soup can do.
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>> thanks so much for joining us. and tomorrow we have chris jericho on. >> fantastic. >> don't

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